Norton v. Thiebes Stierling Music Co.

82 Mo. App. 216, 1899 Mo. App. LEXIS 518
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 12, 1899
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 82 Mo. App. 216 (Norton v. Thiebes Stierling Music Co.) 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
Norton v. Thiebes Stierling Music Co., 82 Mo. App. 216, 1899 Mo. App. LEXIS 518 (Mo. Ct. App. 1899).

Opinion

BLAND, P. J.

"William E. Norton, Jr., brought suit in the. circuit court, city of St. Louis, against Gustav Heinrichs, by attachment; the Thiebes-Stierlin Music Company was garnished and appeared in said court, and to interrogatories denied any indebtedness to the defendant Heinrichs; Norton replied, alleging in substance, that the garnishee knowing that Heinrichs was indebted to Norton and others, entered into a conspiracy and arrangement with Heinrichs, whereby the Thiebes-Stierlin Music Company should institute certain attachment suits against Heinrichs before a justice of the peace within the city of St. Louis, upon which writs should be issued and delivered to a constable, and that ostensible levies should be made on all the assets of Heinrichs to be found in said city, and that these ostensible levies should be maintained on the receipts of the sales of tickets that were and should be made to certain operatic performances, given and to be given by Heinrichs Operatic Company at the Grand Music Hall in the said city of St. Louis during a week beginning about March 9, 1896; that to carry out this fraudulent scheme Heinrichs gave to the garnishee his four promissory notes of $500 each, 'due on demand, which notes were immendiately filed before a justice for suit 'and writs of attachment procured and delivered to a deputy constable, who under the direction of the garnishee made ostensible levies on all the property of Heinrichs found in St. Louis and on all the moneys then received and which should bethereafterreceived for thesale of tickets to theseveral operatic performances, given and to be given by the Heinrichs Operatic Company; that no actual levy was made on anything, and that the constable took nothing into his possession on which he pretended to levy the several writs of attachment, but that all the money received on account of the sale of tickets went into the possession of the garnishee, etc., and from this source it (the garnishee) received $2,500, of the moneys of Heinrichs, and that the other property of Heinrichs, on which [220]*220the constable ostensibly levied was turned back to Heinrichs or other claimants.

The answer of the garnishee was a general denial. The issues were tried' by a jury, who found a verdict for the defendant. After an unavailing motion for new trial plaintiff appealed.

From the evidence adduced on the trial we gather the following facts: Heinrichs, a resident of the city of New York, in 1896 organized an opera company of about one hundred musicians, and started out to give performances in several cities, including the cities of Cincinnati, Ohio, and St. Louis, Mo.; his advance agent, Alfred Hoegerle, came to the city of St. Louis, to arrange for a series of entertainments to be given here; to perfect his arrangements he interested the Thiebes-Stierlin Music Company, a corporation conducting a music Store on Olive street, St. Louis, and induced this company to make advance sales of tickets, to guarantee hall rent, printing bills, etc. After the guarantees had been given and after a considerable number of advance sale of tickets had been made and the performances to begin March 9, 1896 had been largely advertised, Hoegerle went to Fred C. Stierlin, secretary of the Thiebes-Stierlin Music Company, and represented to him that Heinrichs with his company was stranded in the city of Cincinnati, and unless financial 'assistance was given him, he would not be able to come to St. Louis to fill his engagements. Stierlin in company with Hoegerle, immediately went to Cincinnati and found the situation as represented, and ■that it was necessary topayouteonsiderablesums of money and guarantee the payment of other sums to enable Heinrichs and his company to get out of Cincinnati and to reach St. Louis in time to meet their engagements there. To get the opera company out of Cincinnati, Stierlin, for his company, advanced $1,465 to Heinrichs, and guaranteed his and the railroad fare of his company from Cincinnati to St. Louis, and took from Heinrichs and his manager Hoegerle the following [221]*221contract, to secure what had been paid to, and what the garnishee had agreed to pay for Heinrichs, to wit:

“Cincinnati, Mafch 7, 1896.
“Received of Thiebes-Stierlin Music Company fourteen hundred and sixty-five dollars. Advanced to Heinrichs Grand Opera Company. Said amount to be deducted from first receipts from performances to be given at St. Louis Exposition Music Hall during week of March 9, 1896.
“The Heinrichs Grand Opera Company guarantee the Thiebes-Stierlin Music Company against all losses, and should the amount of the St. Louis engagement be insufficient to cover the above and any other advances made, the indebtedness not repaid is to be considered a first lien on the receipts of any future engagements at any city in any state until the whole amount shall have been paid.
“The Heinrichs Grand Opera Company further guarantee to give seven performances at the Music Hall in St. Louis, and to give the Thiebes-Stierlin Music Company the preference over and above all creditors on the receipts of such performances until they shall have been paid.
'Done in Cincinnati, Ohio, this 7th day of March.
“Gustav Heinrichs,
“Alfred Hoegerle,
“Business Manager.”

At the same time Heinrichs and his manager agreed that the Thiebes-Stierlin Music Company should handle the sale of all tickets and apply the gross proceeds to the payment of advances already made and all other advances to be thereafter made to enable Heinrichs to give the opera performances he had agreed to give. Under this arrangement the Thiebes-Stierlin Music Company handled the sale of all tickets to the performances given at the Grand Music Hall and all the moneys that were received on sales of such tickets, which amounted to $3,450. The amount paid out by the Thiebes-Stierlin Music Company to bring Heinrichs & Company to [222]*222St. Louis, for rent of hall, advertising, and other expenses incurred on account of the performances, was $5,774.77. Out of the proceeds of the sale of tickets the Thiebes-Stierlin Music Company paid a debt due from Heinrichs to a party in the East, and advanced some money to Heinrichs during the performances to pay personal expenses of Heinrichs & Company, leaving a balance in its hands to the credit of Heinrichs of $2,479.88, and a balance due from Heinrichs to the garnishee of $3,294.89. The performances began on a Monday; on the following Wednesday or Thursday Mr. Delano, a lawyer, presented a bill of $187 due from Heinrichs to an eastern party, to the Thiebes-Stierlin Music Company for payment, and threatened to attach Heinrichs and stop the performances if the bill was not paid. The music company paid this debt from moneys received on sale of tickets, rather than have the performances interrupted by an attachment, and then employed Delano as its attorney, who the secretary of the company (Mr.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
82 Mo. App. 216, 1899 Mo. App. LEXIS 518, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/norton-v-thiebes-stierling-music-co-moctapp-1899.