McCartney v. Shepard

21 Mo. 573
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedOctober 15, 1855
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 21 Mo. 573 (McCartney v. Shepard) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McCartney v. Shepard, 21 Mo. 573 (Mo. 1855).

Opinion

Ryland, Judge,

delivered the opinion of the court.

This was a suit by McCartney against Shepard, upon a promise made by Shepard to the plaintiff, to indemnify him against selling property under execution. McCartney was acting as deputy constable.

The petition sets forth that two executions were issued by proper authority, on two judgments obtained in suits instituted by the defendant, Shepard, in behalf of Alexander Kays er and Nathaniel Holmes, trustees of Mary Malinda Hill, against John Atkinson, before' a' justice of the peace ; that these executions were issued' by the justice, and' directed to Samuel Maxwell, constable that the plaintiff, McCartney, under and by virtue of said writs'and authority by said constable to him, as deputy of said constable, was about to levy upon certain goods and chattels, as the property of said Atkinson, liable to be taken in execution, when the said Atkinson claimed the said goods to be exempt from execution ; that the plaintiff refused to levy on the goods without an indemnity from the defendant, who was the agent of the plaintiff in the execution ; that thereupon the defendant-, in consideration that the plaintiff, at the defendant’s request, wnnld levy upon and sell the goods and chattels of the said Atkinson, undertook and promised and agreed to indemnify the plaintiff, and save' him harmless from all loss and damage which he might sustain in consequence thereof; that the plaintiff, confiding in the defendant’s prom[575]*575ise, did seize upon the goods and chattels of said Atkinson, which were pointed out to him by the defendant, and did sell so much thereof as satisfied the judgments and executions aforesaid.

The plaintiff farther states that afterwards Atkinson brought suit against him in the law commissioner’s court, by reason of the premises, in an action of trespass, for taking and carrying away the goods and chattels aforesaid, under and by virtue of the said executions ; that such proceedings were thereupon had'; that the said Atkinson, on the 16th day of May, A. D. 1851, in the said court, recovered judgment against the plaintiff for taking and selling the said goods and chattels as aforesaid, for the sum of $100, the value of the goods,- and $47 10 costs. By means of which said several premises the plaintiff was bound to pay, and did pay and satisfy, the said sums of money so recovered against him; of all which premises the defendant had notice, yet he has wholly failed to indemnify the plaintiff, and still refuses so to do, to the damage of the plaintiff of $150.

The defendant files his answer to this petition, in which he states that it is not true that two suits were instituted by him at the time stated before said justice against said Atkinson, or that two judgments were obtained by him as in said petition mentioned — denies that any executions were issued in his favor against said Atkinson, or that the plaintiff acted under the authority of any such executions, or that any levy thereof was made by plaintiff. Defendant denies that he ever became bound, undertook and promised the plaintiff to indemnify him for the consideration mentioned in his petition, or for any other, against any loss or damage which he might sustain in consequence of the levying of the said executions, or either of them, upon the supposed property of the said Atkinson. Defendant further says that, as to the recovery of any judgment by said Atkinson against the plaintiff, he has no knowledge of his own sufficient to form a belief, nor as to the time when, in what court, for what amount, nor upon what cause of action, nor [576]*576whether any such supposed judgment was recovered by due .process of law, and without defence of plaintiff; nor whether the plaintiff has satisfied and paid any such judgment and costs, .and requires strict proof of such matters. He denies that the plaintiff has been damaged in the sums by him alleged, or in any sum, and denies that he is entitled to any judgment. '

The trial was had by the court without a jury, and the court found the facts as follows : “ That in the month of November, 1850, two suits were instituted before Joseph S. Hull, Esq., then a justice of the peace within and for St. Louis county, by the said defendant, acting as the agent and in the name ,of Alexander Kayser and Nathaniel Holmes, trustees of Mary Malinda .Hill, against one John Atkinson ; that two judgments were obtained against the said Atkinson in said suits ; that executions were issued thereon, by the said justice, directed to •one Samuel Maxwell, a constable of St. Louis township, and •delivered to plaintiff, who was deputy for said Maxwell, to be .executed.; that defendant requested the plaintiff to levy upon and sell .the goods and chattels of said Atkinson, then in the ‘house of said Atkinson, to satisfy both executions, alleging •that the said Atkinson was not the head of a family, and that .he, the defendant, would indemnify him against any loss he might sustain by reason of the levy and sale; thereupon, in pursuance of defendant’s request, he levied upon the said At-xinson’s property and it was afterwards sold to satisfy the said executions ; that in April, 1851, the said John Atkinson instituted an action against the said plaintiff, in the law commissioner’s court, because of the levy and sale of his said property, alleging the said plaintiff was guilty of a trespass in that behalf, which said action was prosecuted to final judgment against plaintiff, and he was adjudged to pay one hundred dollars and the costs of said suit, which amounts to $50 10, which judgment and costs were paid by said plaintiff, on the 24th June, 1851.” -Upon these facts the court declared the law to be in favor of the plaintiff, and rendered judgment for him accordingly.

[577]*577The defendant filed Ms motion for review, setting out all the evidence. This motion was overruled and excepted to, and the defendant brings the case here by appeal.

The finding of the facts by the court supports the allegations in the plaintiff’s petition, and the facts found warrant the judgment rendered thereon.

The only questions in the ca,se arise upon the evidence. If the evidence be competent and will warrant the finding, the judgment must be affirmed.

The defendant objected to the admission in evidence of the transcripts of the two judgments before the justice of the peace, and also of that before the law commissioner, in which Atkinson was plaintiff and the present plaintiff was defendant. These objections are not stated on the record, nor can we see what they were. The record shows that the plaintiff offered the following transcript (which is copied into the record, and is one of the exhibits annexed to plaintiff’s petition, and which, by the reference, this court finds to be the transcript of the judgment before Joseph S. Hull, in favor of Kayser and Holmes, trustees for Hill vs. Atkinson, mentioned in the petition of plaintiff). The defendant objected ; his objections were overruled, and he excepted. The same entry is made in regard to the ob - ejection to the other two records. These objections are entitled to no weight. The courts should not listen to such general and wholesale objections. If the party objecting to the admission in evidence of transcripts of judgments, exemplifications of records, or of depositions, or other such matters, chooses to content himself by a general objection, then the court should admit such evidence.

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Bluebook (online)
21 Mo. 573, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mccartney-v-shepard-mo-1855.