Newman v. York

74 Mo. App. 292, 1898 Mo. App. LEXIS 310
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedMarch 29, 1898
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 74 Mo. App. 292 (Newman v. York) 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
Newman v. York, 74 Mo. App. 292, 1898 Mo. App. LEXIS 310 (Mo. Ct. App. 1898).

Opinion

Bland, P. J.

— I agree that the judgment in this ease-should be reversed and the cause remanded for retrial, but I am not able to concur in the opinion of Judge Biggs, that the law of February 25, 1891 (Laws of 1891, p. 45), have no application to attachment proceedings before a justice of the peace.. If the law of 1891 is inapplicable to this case, then there is no law on. [295]*295our statute books by which the lien of an attaching creditor can be preserved for one minute after the return of a verdict for the defendant on a plea in abatement, . and the constable is bound immediately on demand of the defendant to deliver the attached property to him, yet it is conceded that the plaintiff may appeal from such a verdict, but of what avail would be his appeal if before he can file an affidavit for his appeal, the property upon which he relies to make his debt, is released and his lien is gone. This court has on two occasions held that the law .of 1891 does apply to appeals from justices’ courts in attachment suits, first in an opinion delivered by Judge Rombauek in Crawford v. Armstrong, 58 Mo. App. 214; and later in an opinion delivered by Judge Biggs in Laun v. Pfister, 69 Mo. App. 629. If this law is applicable to ■control the time when an appeal may be taken, I can see no reason why it should not be applicable as to the proper steps to be taken to perfect the appeal and also to preserve the plaintiff’s lien on the attached property until such time as the plaintiff is allowed to perfect his appeal. Of course, the plaintiff can not file a bill of exceptions upon the finding of an adverse verdict by a jury on a plea in abatement to the attachment, but he can give notice of his intention to appeal so soon as the law will permit him to do so, and the giving of such notice should authorize the justice to order the constable to hold the property so as to continue the lien until the plaintiff can perfect his appeal, and notice to the constable of intention to appeal should have the same effect. The rule is not absolute and without exception that the officer must deliver the attached property on the finding of a verdict for the defendant on á plea in abatement. If no appeal is taken from the judgment abating the attachment, or where the plaintiff dismisses his suit, or gives no notice of appeal from [296]*296an adverse verdict of judgment, it would be the duty of the officer to deliver the attached property to the defendant on demand, but where an appeal lies and timely notice of plaintiff’s purpose to take an. appeal is given, the officer should hold the property, in order to continue the lien, under the law of 1891, until the plaintiff has had an opportunity and time in which to perfect his appeal, and it seems to me that in view of the fact that the legislature has fixed a time in which all appeals may be taken, that it is not within the province or power of the courts to say that an appeal in this character of case should be taken in a shorter time than that allowed by law, or to leave it to guess what should be a reasonable time in a given state of circumstances.

peaiinjustices The citations made by Judge Biggs in his opinion from Drake and Shinn on Attachments and cases cited from other states, are inapplicable to this case, if the law of 1891 is to control appeals in attachment suits from the judgments of justices.of the peace. The case of State ex rel. v. Fitzpatrick, 64 Mo. 185, is explained and modified by the cases of Camp v. Schuster, Hingston & Co., 51 Mo. App. 403, and Jaffray v. Claflin, 119 Mo. 117. In the light of section 604, Revised Statutes 1889, which provides that “the provisions of law governing attachments in courts of record shall apply to attachments before justices of the peace, so> far as the same may not be inconsistent with the provisions which are,specifically applicable to the latter,” and of the construction given to this statute in Bagley v. Kelly, 38 Mo. App. 623, and Hubbard v. Quisenberry, 28 Mo. App. 20. I see no difficulty in holding that the law of 1891 is applicable to attachment proceedings m justices courts, not only as to the time when the appeal may be taken, but also as to the preservation of the [297]*297lien of the attachment, after verdict abating the attachment, until an appeal therefrom can be taken by the plaintiff. Applying this law to this case, it was the duty of the constable after the finding of the verdict for the defendant, if he was timely notified by plaintiff of his intention to appeal, to hold the property until the plaintiff had time and opportunity to perfect his appeal.

Judge Bond concurs in this opinion. •

SEPARATE OPINION BY JUDGE BIGGS.

In the assignment of causes the record in this case came to me. I wrote an opinion reversing the judgment and remanding the cause. The opinion was returned with the indorsement that my associate judges concurred in the result only.

I declined to file the opinion, and I returned the record with the request that an opinion be written expressing the views of the court, to the end that the circuit court might have some guide in the retrial of the case. Judge Bland has prepared an opinion, in which Judge Bond concurs, and to which I can not agree. As the question involved is an important one, I deem it proper to state my views in a separate opinion.

There is but little controversy as to the facts.

The relator sued one Armstead by attachment before a justice of the peace. The defendant York, who was the constable of the township, served the attachment writ by levying upon a horse. There was a plea in abatement. Upon the trial of the issues presented by the plea in abatement the finding was for Armstead. Upon the same day there was a judgment for the debt, there being no defense to the merits. These proceedings were had on the twenty-ninth day of December, 1893. An appeal was granted to the plaintiff on the second day of January, 1894. On a [298]*298trial in the circuit court the attachment was sustained and a judgment for the debt was entered.

An execution was issued on the judgment and returned unsatisfied. On the day following the dissolution of the attachment before the justice the defendant York delivered the horse to Armstead. The relator claims that the delivery was unauthorized. The evidence for the defendant tended to show that in compliance with a demand of Armstead the horse was delivered to him; that the delivery was made before an appeal was asked for, and before York had notice that an appeal would be taken. The evidence for the relator was to the effect that his attorney notified York on the day the judgment was rendered that an appeal would be perfected as soon as it was possible to do so. The circuit court instructed the jury that the defendants were not-liable if the horse was delivered on the demand of Armstead and before an appeal had been granted. The theory of the instruction is that the verdict of the jury on the plea in abatement dissolved the attachment, and that unless the relator appealed instanter it was the duty of York to redeliver the horse to Armstead.

There can be no question that the effect of a verdict for the defendant on a plea in abatement before a justice of the peace is to dissolve the attachment. The statute so provides. (R. S. 1889, sec. 595.) Independent of the statute it is the rule announced by all the text-books and decisions. Neither is there any question under the authorities that upon a dissolution of the attachment the defendant is entitled to a return of the property. Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
74 Mo. App. 292, 1898 Mo. App. LEXIS 310, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/newman-v-york-moctapp-1898.