Mesendieck Grain Co. v. Falz

50 S.W.2d 159, 227 Mo. App. 24, 1932 Mo. App. LEXIS 102
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedMay 23, 1932
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 50 S.W.2d 159 (Mesendieck Grain Co. v. Falz) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mesendieck Grain Co. v. Falz, 50 S.W.2d 159, 227 Mo. App. 24, 1932 Mo. App. LEXIS 102 (Mo. Ct. App. 1932).

Opinion

BRAND, J.

This is an appeal from the action of the court in rendering judgment against the interpleader in an attachment suit.

The facts show that the Mesendieck Grain Company and Goffe & Carkener, Inc., on August 17, 1929, instituted separate suits by attachment, without bond, against John A. Folz, a non-resident. Upon the same day the Hodgson-Cauthorn Grain Company was summoned as garnishee in both cases. Both suits were filed during the May term of the court and were returnable to the September term. Upon September 7, 1929, which w'as the last day of the May term, defendant filed his entry of appearance and answer and motion to dissolve the attachment in each case, without notice to plaintiffs or their attorneys. These motions, likewise without any notice, were sustained on the same day by the judge of the assignment division and entries were made dissolving the attachments in each case.

On September '9', 1929, which was the first day of the September term, the sheriff released the writs of attachment in each case and *25 delivered written releases of the garnishee to the defendant, Folz, and to John R. Sullivan, his attorney. They immediately delivered said releases to the garnishee, demanding payment of the latter of the sum of $1606.03, for which sum the garnishee was indebted to the defendant. But the garnishee refused to pay over that sum or any part thereof. Thereupon, defendant assigned to Sullivan the fund in the hands of the garnishee belonging to the defendant and gave to the garnishee written notice of said assignment.

Thereafter, on September 9, 1929, the Mesendieck Grain Company, without any notice to the defendant or to any other person filed, in the circuit court, its motion to set aside the order dissolving the attachment in its case and, on the same day, the then judge of the assignment division, who w'as other than the judge who dissolved the attachment, made, without any notice to any of the other parties, an order setting aside, on the ground ‘ ‘ of a mistake, ’ ’ the prior order dissolving the attachment. The Mesendieck Grain Company was given three days in which to file an attachment bond in the sum of $3000, which bond was filed by the latter on September 11, 1929. On September 13, 1929, defendant filed a “motion for rehearing and to set aside order setting aside order dissolving attachment,” which w'as signed by Sullivan, as attorney for defendant. Nothing has been done toward having this motion disposed of.

On March 30, 1931, Sullivan, as assignee of the defendant, filed in each case, his interplea claiming all of the fund. On April 2, 1931, both cases were assigned to Division No. 4, a jury was waived and by stipulation between the parties, both causes were consolidated and they were tried, resulting in a judgment against the interpleader and in favor of plaintiffs. Interpleader has appealed.

It is insisted by the interpleader that the court erred in finding that the order dissolving the attachment w'as void. In this connection interpleader states:

“The record herein therefore presents to this court for determination the question whether or not in cases where plaintiff has brought suit by attachment against a non-resident without bond, the nonresident defendant can enter his appearance before the return day and file his answer to the merits of the case together with a motion to dissolve and have the attachment dissolved as of course. In other words, in such cases does the circuit court have jurisdiction and pow'er tq dissolve the attachment wdthout fixing a time within which the plaintiff may file a bond?”

Section 1278, Revised Statutes 1929, on the subject of attachments, provides that a plaintiff who desires to file an attachment suit shall file an affidavit and bond, but in case the defendant is a nonresident of the State, no bond shall be required; that whenever any writ of *26 attachment has issued against a nonresident and plaintiff has given no bond, the attachment shall be dissolved, as a matter of course, upon defendant entering his appearance and filing' his answer to the merits of the case; “unless the plaintiff, within a time fixed by the court, shall file his bond in double the amount sworn to in the affidavit of plaintiff, the time so given to be not more than ten days from the time the motion to dissolve the attachment is presented to the court for action thereon, and the right to file such bond shall expire with the term of court at which leave to file the bond is given, unless by agreement of record by the plaintiff and defendant. Such bond, as to its effects and obligation of the parties to the bond, shall be the same as if filed before the writ of attachment was issued.” That part of section 1278, set out above within quotation marks, was, by way of amendment, in 1919, added by the Legislature.

The interpleader insists that the new matter providing for the fixing by the court of the time for filing a bond is merely directory and not mandatory; that the action of the court in this instance, in dissolving the attachment and fixing the time for the filing of bond by the plaintiff, was not invalid and that when the assignment was made the money in the hands of the garnishee had been freed of the attachment; that although Mesendieck Grain Company subsequently filed a bond, that the filing of the bond was not retroactive so as to defeat the assignment by the defendant.

In this connection interpleader calls our attention to the case of Brown v. McKown, 265 Mo. 320, where a history of the attachment statute is given. In that case, which was decided before the amendment of 1919, it was said that the purpose of the statute was to permit plaintiffs who were unable to furnish bond, to obtain service upon a nonresident by attaching the latter’s property and forcing him to enter his appearance; that unless the statute had contained the provision that upon entry of appearance the attachment should be dissolved, it would likely have been unconstitutional as class legislation. In Donovan v. Gibbs, 268 Mo. 279, likewise decided before the amendment of 1919, it was held that upon the entry of appearance of the nonresident the attachment was not ipso facto dissolved, but that in order to accomplish this result, it was necessary that action be taken by the court, on the application of the defendant, to dissolve the attachment or the party entitled to the benefit of such application. [See also Pittman v. West, 198 Mo. App. 92.]

In this connection interpleader calls our attention to sections 1321 and 1322, Revised Statutes 1929, and says:

“These sections standing in the body of the attachment statute clearly show the intention of tacking the nonresident provision on to the end of section 1278, was intended only as a provision to force non *27 residents to enter their personal appearance to such eases and that after that purpose was accomplished, the other sections of the attachment law should govern as to procedural and substantive rights of the parties.”

Whatever may have been the purpose of the Legislature in providing, prior to 1919, for suits by attachment against non-residents without bond, it is quite plain that the amendment of 1919 was for the benefit of plaintiffs in attachment srfits against non-residents.

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Bluebook (online)
50 S.W.2d 159, 227 Mo. App. 24, 1932 Mo. App. LEXIS 102, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mesendieck-grain-co-v-falz-moctapp-1932.