Rosentreter v. Brady

63 Mo. App. 398, 1895 Mo. App. LEXIS 210
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedNovember 12, 1895
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 63 Mo. App. 398 (Rosentreter v. Brady) 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
Rosentreter v. Brady, 63 Mo. App. 398, 1895 Mo. App. LEXIS 210 (Mo. Ct. App. 1895).

Opinion

Biggs, J.

This is an action by David Rosentreter to recover the possession of a lot of dry goods. The property was taken from the defendant in the city of St. Louis, and delivered to Rosentreter. It was ruled by the circuit court, on demurrer, that the plaintiff’s amended statement failed to state a cause of action. [399]*399Upon refusal of plaintiff to plead further, an inquiry was had to determine the value of the property and the damages for taking and detaining it. The matter was heard before a jury. Evidence was introduced by both parties bearing on the question at issue, and,-under the instructions of the court, the jury found the value of the goods at the date of the trial to be $1,250 and the damages $250. The statutory judgment was entered on the verdict against the plaintiff and his bondsmen. After unsuccessfully moving for a new trial, they have appealed to this court.

Omitting the formal parts, the amended complaint reads: “Comes now the above named plaintiff, David Rosentreter, and for amended petition avers that at the time of the institution of this suit he was, and now is, entitled to the possession of the following described personal property as bailee of the constables hereinafter named, who had seized said property under writs of attachment against S. Gasen, to wit: Fourteen boxes and one package and the contents thereof, consisting of clothing, shoes, jewelry, and underwear, said boxes and package having been marked ‘S. Wagehalter, St. Louis, Mo.,’ and being the same carried by the Pacific Express Company from Litchfield, Illinois, to the city of St. Louis, Missouri, on December 23, 1892, and being also the same property received by plaintiff alone from William McCann and B. B. Cassedy, constables of the city of Litchfield, Illinois, on said twenty-third day of December, 1892, and also the same property delivered by the sheriff in this cause to the plaintiff alone on the twenty-fourth day of December, 1892; and that said-property is of the actual value of $750.” Then followed other formal averments, which need not be set out.

One of the grounds of demurrer is want of capacity in plaintiff to sue. Under the averments of the [400]*400amended complaint it affirmatively appears that, at the date of the institution of the suit, the plaintiff had no property interest whatever in the goods. The allegation is that he once held the goods as the agent or receiptor of two constables in the state of Illinois, who had levied upon the property under attachment process. How he lost the possession does not appear, and in the discussion of this ground of demurrer it is needless to inquire. At best, he at one time held! the goods as the servant of the officers, with no property interest either general or special in the goods. The special property was in the constable, and the general property was in the defendant in the attachments. There is no third species of property. Dillenback v. Jerome, 7 Cow. 294; Barker v. Miller, 6 Johns. 196; Warren v. Leland, 9 Mass. 254; Whittier v. Smith, 11 Mass. 211; Waterman v. Robinson, 5 Mass. 303; Commonwealth v. Morse, 14 Mass. 217; Ludden v. Leavitt, 9 Mass. 104. The same doctrine has been substantially declared in this state in the case of Hambleton v. Lynch, 32 Mo. 259. In that case the slave in controversy had been seized by a constable under an execution against a third person. After the seizure the slave was claimed by Hambleton. Thereupon the plaintiff in the execution gave an indemnification bond. Thereafter the constable delivered the slave to Lynch for safe keeping. In a suit by Hambleton against Lynch for the possession of the slave, it was held by the supreme court that the possession of Lynch was the possession of the constable only, and that, as the suit could not be maintained against the constable, it would not lie against Lynch.

Upon principle the rule as stated in the cases cited must be correct. It is universally held that a sheriff or constable may place attached property in the hands of a disinterested person for safe keeping. This [401]*401he could not do, if the possession of the receiptor could be treated as an independent possession, or if by reason of it he became vested with an interest; for to maintain the levy the possession of the officer must be exclusive and continuous. Now, it has been the law of this state, since the decision in the case of Broadwater v. Darne, 10 Mo. 277, that, to maintain replevin, the plaintiff must show that he has either a general or special interest in the property, and that he is entitled to the exclusive and immediate possession thereof. See, also, Gray v. Barker, 38 Mo. 160; Gartside v. Nixon, 43 Mo. 138; Wright v. Richmond, 21 Mo. App. 76; Draper v. Farris, 56 Mo. App. 417. In the Farris case it was held that the plaintiff could not recover in replevin, when his evidence showed that the title to the property was in a third person; hence, upon the same principle, the plaintiff’s petition would be subject to demurrer where it affirmatively showed that fact. This conclusion is unavoidable.

There is nothing in the case of Springfield Grocer Company v. Shackelford, 56 Mo. App. 642, contrary to this. The point of decision there was that, in the absence of any affirmative evidence of title, the fact that the plaintiff was in the possession of the goods at the time of their seizure under the writ of attachment was some evidence of title in it. Here it is not averred that Brady took the goods from the plaintiff,. but it does inferentially appear that he took them from the Pacific Express Company. "We, therefore, conclude that, under the allegations in the petition the plaintiff had no right to sue, and that the judgment of the circuit court on the demurrer must be affirmed. Whether the liens of the attachment were lost by the mere removal of the property to this state, we need not decide.

The judgment of the circuit court was against the plaintiff and his sureties for the return of the property,. [402]*402or its assessed value. The correctness of the judgment is challenged by motion in arrest. The point of attack is that there was no answer, and that, in the absence of an answer making claim to the property and demanding its return, such a judgment could not be rendered. R. S., see. 7489. In 1860 the legislature amended the section by adding the words 1 ‘and the defendant in his answer claim the same and demands a return thereof.” Just why a defendant should be required to do this, in order to entitle him to a summary judgment against the plaintiff and his sureties for a return of the property or its assessed value, is not quite clear. Whatever the reason may have been is a matter of no moment, however, for it is our duty to interpret and apply the statute in a reasonable way. The meaning of the statute is that, where the defendant admits the taking of the property, but denies the right of the plaintiff to its possession, in order to entitle him to a judgment for its return, or at his option a judgment for its assessed value, he must in his answer make claim of title to the property and demand its return; for to entitle him to such a judgment he must show affirmatively that he had the full title, or that the plaintiff was a stranger to the title. Eor this reason, in all probability, the legislature amended the law requiring a defendant to present these issues by his answer.

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Bluebook (online)
63 Mo. App. 398, 1895 Mo. App. LEXIS 210, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rosentreter-v-brady-moctapp-1895.