Moriund v. Johnson

124 S.W. 80, 140 Mo. App. 345, 1910 Mo. App. LEXIS 22
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedJanuary 10, 1910
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 124 S.W. 80 (Moriund v. Johnson) 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
Moriund v. Johnson, 124 S.W. 80, 140 Mo. App. 345, 1910 Mo. App. LEXIS 22 (Mo. Ct. App. 1910).

Opinion

NIXON, P. J.

(after stating the facts).- — -This action, as we have seen from the statement, was commenced before a justice of the peace, and an inspection of the statement and affidavit of the plaintiff as filed before the justice reveals that he almost literally copied the form of the statement and affidavit provided by section 3902 of the Revised Statutes of 1899. The answer of the defendants contained a general denial and also set up a plea of justification that the defendant, James Johnson, was a constable, and as such officer had seized the property in question and held it under an execution. The other defendant interpleaded and on his own motion was made codefendant.

Under the issues in this case, the defendants having denied the allegations of plaintiff’s statement, the plaintiff was required, in order to maintain his action of replevin, to prove a general or special property interest in and the right to immediate and exclusive pos[350]*350session of the property detained, and it was permissible for the defendants to show that plaintiff had no exclusive right to possession, or that some other party had such exclusive right to possession, or that plaintiff had no general or special property interest in the stock taken. [American Metal Co. v. Daugherty, 204 Mo. 71, 102 S. W. 538.]

It is conceded by both parties that Joe Moriund, the brother of the plaintiff, was the common source of title of the property in question. The plaintiff claims through him, and the defendants at the trial sought to impeach the validity of the transfer from Joe Moriund to the plaintiff. The defendants had the right to show that plaintiff and Joe Moriund were jointly interested in the property or jointly in possession of the same, and such a showing would have been a good defense to plaintiff’s action whether defendants had a valid execution or not, since the action of replevin, under our statutes, can only be maintained by one having the right to immediate and exclusive possession. [Steckman v. Galt State Bank, 126 Mo. App. 664, 105 S. W. 674; McCabe v. Black River Transp. Co., 131 Mo. App. 531, 110 S. W. 606.]

Over these questions of law there can be no real controversy in this case. But the defendants also pleaded as a defense that they had an execution against Joe Moriund and that the property was taken from Joe Moriund by the defendant Johnson under an execution. The serious controversy in this case, upon which the action of the trial court in receiving evidence and giving instructions is principally challenged, arises from this allegation of the defendants’ answer. At the trial, the following colloquy took place concerning the introduction of a certain check given by Joe Moriund to one Jaques in payment for a horse, the amount of the check being fifty dollars:

Mr. Thornberry (attorney for respondents) : “Ii [351]*351we can. show a judgment, the presumption is that it is legal.”
Mr. Steele (attorney for appellant) : “There is no presumption arising from a judgment of a justice of the peace. The witness cannot go on and answer that he had a judgment and execution. We would like to see them if they have one.”
Mr. Mayhew (attorney for respondents) : “That would he immaterial.”
Mr. .Thornberry: “We don’t have to show any title.”
Mr. Viles (attorney for appellant) : “You ought to show some right to take this property.”
Mr. Mayhew: “Did Mr. Moriund give you his note for this money?”
Mr. Steele: “Plaintiff objects. They plead a judgment and execution. If they have a judgment, let us see it.”
Mr. Mayhew: “This is a case of fraud, and it vitiates everything.”
The Court: “Have you a copy of the judgment and execution?”
Mr. Mayhew: “No, sir, I have not.”
■ The Court: “I think the burden is on the plaintiff to show that. Go ahead with the witness.”

While there was some controversy in the trial court as to whether appellant’s attorney in his opening statement had admitted that he presumed there was an execution, no such admission appears in our present record of the case, and no such execution, as a matter of fact, was offered in evidence during the trial, presumably on the ground that the ruling of the trial court, which we have given, rendered it unnecessary.

It is true that in all cases of replevin commenced before justices of the peace under our statutes, the form prescribed by law requirés that the plaintiff shall state — and verify the statement — that the property has not been taken under any execution, attachment, etc. [352]*352But it will be noticed that such statement only goes as to process issued against the plaintiff and is not a general denial that the property is not in the custody of the law by reason of its process. This allegation, however, is jurisdictional, and does not constitute an estoppel in any way, or throw the burden in such case upon the plaintiff to prove the negative allegation that an officer taking the property did not have a valid execution or other process. If the officer had a writ which authorized the seizure of the property, it was a matter of defense to be shown by such officer and need not be produced by the plaintiff in the first instance. [Knoche v. Perry, 90 Mo. App. loc. cit. 488.] Cobbey on Replevin, sec. 982, page 551, in which the law is stated as follows: “In a suit before a justice of the peace to recover personal property, the plaintiff need not prove the averments in his affidavit that it ‘had not been taken by virtue of any tax, etc., nor seized on execution/ etc. If such is defendant’s claim, it should be set up affirmatively as a defense.”

But as we have stated, no process, such as was mentioned in defendants’ answer, was in fact introduced in evidence. Nevertheless, the case was tried upon the theory that such process had been introduced in evidence, or upon the theory — supported by the ruling of the trial court — that it devolved upon the plaintiff to prove the negative fact that the officer did not have such writ.

Defendants’ plea of justification was virtually á confession and avoidance, admitting the taking of the property. In any event, in this action in which the defendants sought to prove that Joe Moriund was the common source of title, there would be no legal objection to their showing the title to be in the plaintiff; but unless the constable, James Johnson, had a writ authorizing him to seize the property of Joe Moriund, he could not attack or invalidate for fraud any sale from Joe Moriund to the plaintiff. Without such show[353]*353ing, the defendants did not stand in any sucb relation to tbe property referred to as to permit them to assail tbe validity of tbe transfer. It would be a legal transfer between Joe Moriund and bis assignee, John Moriund, tbe plaintiff, and before tbe defendants could attack tba good faitb of sucb a sale, tbe defendant, James Johnson, as constable, must have bad sucb a valid writ as would bave made bim tbe representative of tbe creditors. Otherwise, it was no concern of his whether tbe sale was valid or not. As was said by Mr. Justice Cooley in tbe case of Matthews v. Densmore, 43 Mich. 461, 5 N. W. 669: “But if be has no sucb writ, it is no concern of bis Avbetber tbe mortgages are valid or not.

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Bluebook (online)
124 S.W. 80, 140 Mo. App. 345, 1910 Mo. App. LEXIS 22, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/moriund-v-johnson-moctapp-1910.