L. & N. Clothing Co. v. Conder

58 S.W.2d 221, 248 Ky. 28, 1933 Ky. LEXIS 173
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedMarch 7, 1933
StatusPublished

This text of 58 S.W.2d 221 (L. & N. Clothing Co. v. Conder) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976) primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
L. & N. Clothing Co. v. Conder, 58 S.W.2d 221, 248 Ky. 28, 1933 Ky. LEXIS 173 (Ky. 1933).

Opinion

Opinion op the Court by

Judge Clay

— Reversing..

Millie Conder brought this suit against Irving Cos-tin and George R. Slyn, trading and doing business as the L. & N. Clothing Company, to recover damages for wrongfully suing out an attachment. The defense was a general denial and a plea that in consideration of $1 plaintiff signed a writing releasing the defendants from all damages arising.out of the attachment. The trial before a jury resulted in a verdict and judgment for $1,-505, and the defendants have appealed.

The admitted facts are these: Appellants, who conducted a clothing business in the city of Louisville, sued Millie Conder for $31.35 in a magistrate’s court, and obtained a general order of attachment. Later on the wages of appellee, who was working for the Brown-Williamson Tobacco Corporation, were attached. At that time appellee was not indebted to the clothing company. As soon as the attachment was served, the tobacco .company discharged her in accordance with its rules.

As to other phases of the case, the evidence may be summarized as follows: On being informed of her discharge, appellee in company with her brother went to the clothing company’s place of business, and saw Mr. *29 Costin, who told them it was about closing time and to come back the next morning and he would straighten it out. While there he had her sign her name four times in order to compare it with the signature of the alleged purchaser. The next morning he said that he believed she made the bill, and would not release the money or anything. She then told him that they would have to go to court to settle it, and he replied that was satisfactory with him. Appellee then procured an attorney who went to the magistrate’s court and procured an order releasing her money. On the other hand, appellants’ bookkeeper testified that she had been informed by a friend that Millie Conder, the debtor, was employed at tbe Brown-Williamson Tobacco Company. On receiving this information, she wrote a letter to Millie Conder in care of that company telling- her that she owed the bill, and received no reply. Thereupon the alias attachment was issued. On the afternoon that appellee and her brother came to appellants’ place of business, neither of appellants was present. The bookkeeper called Mr. Costin, and from the description he gave of the debtor she was satisfied that appellee was not the person who owed the money, and advised appellee to come back Saturday a,nd get a release. The next morning appellee came to the store, and the bookkeeper told her to go over to the magistrate’s and get a release for her wages. Appellee said that she wanted to go to work, and did not want to be bothered; whereupon the; bookkeeper stated that she would have the porter get the release and take it to the tobacco company’s office. The bookkeeper then had appellants’ porter go to the office of the magistrate and get a paper releasing- the levy and take same to the tobacco company. Appellee’s wages were then released.

It is first insisted that appellants were entitled to a peremptory instruction on 'the ground that an action for maliciously suing- out an attachment will not lie until the attachment has been discharged, and the evidence conclusively shows that the attachment was not discharged, but only that appellee’s wages were released. The rule that no action will lie for maliciously suing out an attachment until 'the attachment shall have been discharged may be conceded, Nolle v. Thompson, 3 Metc. 121; Watts v. Hurst (Ky.) 61 S. W. 261, 22 Ky. Law Rep. 1703; but, in measuring, what was done in the magistrate’s count, we cannot put aside the circumstances inducing his action, or the admissions of ap *30 pellants on the trial. The ground on which appellee’s wages were released was that she was not indebted to appellants, and 'this was conceded by appellants. Therefore the order releasing her wages necessarily terminated the proceeding in her favor, and its legal effect was the same as if there had been an order discharging the attachment.

Another ground on which it is claimed that a peremptory should have gone is that appellee was not the person sued, and that her remedy was an action for wrongful seizure and not for wrongful attachment. It is •true that, where a writ of attachment is levied upon the property of a person other than the defendant in the attachment proceeding, his remedy is by an action for wrongful seizure, and not for wrongful attachment, and that following this rule we held in Farmers’ & Traders’ Tobacco Warehouse Company v. Gibbons, 107 Ky. 611, 55 S. W. 2, 21 Ky. Law Rep. 1348, that one against whom no attachment was sought, and whose name appeared in the copies of the attachment by mistake, could, not maintain an action for wrongfully suing out the attachment. Manifestly that principle is not applicable to the facts of this case. In no sense is appellee a person other than the defendant in the attachment proceeding. Even if it be true that appellants were mistaken in assuming that appellee was their debtor, they did not proceed against her until after their bookkeeper had been informed that she was working for the Brown-Williamson Tobacco Company. In the circumstances she was the defendant whose wages they intended to attach, and against whom the attachment was actually sued out, with the result that she may maintain an action for wrongfully suing out an attachment.

The further-point is made that, pursuant to the rule that, where the faots are undisputed, the question of probable cause is for the court, Davis v. Brady, 218 Ky. 384, 291 S. W. 412, the trial court should have held as a matter of law that there was probable cause for the action taken by appellants. In support of this position, it is argued that it was undisputed that there was a Millie Conder who owed appellants; that appellants were informed 'that she was working at the tobacco company; that they took the precaution to write to her before the attachment was issued; and that, after the levy, they found out that the person whose wages had been *31 attached was not their debtor, and they immediately released the attachment. It must not be overlooked that there was sharp contradiction as to what occurred when appellee and her brother called at the store of appellants and she informed them! that she did not owe them anything. On the one hand, appellants’ witnesses say that they immediately discovered that she was not the right person, and forthwith- took steps to have the levy released. On the other hand, appellee and her brother say the manager still insist that she was the person who owed the bill, and that it was satisfactory to him to take the matter to the court, and that thereupon she employed a lawyer, who succeeded in having the levy released. Because of this contradiction in the evidence, it is at once apparent that we cannot accept as true the evidence of Costin, or the evidence of appellants’ bookkeeper, that she was informed by a friend that Millie Conder was working for the tobacco company, and that, before having the attachment issued, she wrote her a letter to which she received no reply, especially in view of the fact that the name of the friend was not given, and no copy of the letter was produced, but are constrained to hold that the.credibility of appellants’ witnesses was for the jury.

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Related

Davis v. Brady
291 S.W. 412 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976), 1927)
Farmers & Traders Tobacco Warehouse Co. v. Gibbons
55 S.W. 2 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky, 1900)

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Bluebook (online)
58 S.W.2d 221, 248 Ky. 28, 1933 Ky. LEXIS 173, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/l-n-clothing-co-v-conder-kyctapphigh-1933.