Sanders v. Brooks

194 S.W.2d 540, 239 Mo. App. 578, 1946 Mo. App. LEXIS 285
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 1, 1946
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 194 S.W.2d 540 (Sanders v. Brooks) 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
Sanders v. Brooks, 194 S.W.2d 540, 239 Mo. App. 578, 1946 Mo. App. LEXIS 285 (Mo. Ct. App. 1946).

Opinion

*581 CAVE, J.,

This is an appeal by plaintiff from a judgment of the Circuit Court of Lafayette County.

The suit was begun by plaintiff filing a petition in replevin in a justice of the peace court, alleging that he was entitled to the possession of four certain hogs, and that defendants wrongfully detained them. In effect the answer was a general denial. No bond was given by plaintiff and the property remained in the possession of the defendants. The trial resulted in a judgment for the defendants and plaintiff appealed.

In the circuit court plaintiff amended his petition by increasing the value of the hogs and decreasing the amount of damages claimed. Defendants filed amended answer more specifically referred to hereafter.

The cause was tried to a jury, resulting in a verdict to the effect that at the eommeneeiiient of this suit plaintiff was the owner of the hogs, but that defendants then had a lien on said hogs, which lien had never been paid or tendered to the defendants, and that defendants, as against plaintiff were entitled to the possession of the hogs. Judgment was rendered accordingly, and plaintiff appealed.

Plaintiff makes several assignments of error, but they are all directed at: (a) The giving and refusing of certain instructions; and (b) whether defendants had an agister’s lien on the hogs and, if so, did they waive or lose that lien by certain acts and events mentioned in evidence ?

The evidence is to the effect that in March, 1942, plaintiff rented from defendant Clellia Brooks a small house and about three acres of ground, and when he moved to this property he brought with him two of the hogs in controversy. Shortly thereafter defendant Sydney Brooks found these two hogs in his feed lot and learned they were being fed with his corn. He notified plaintiff that he must pay for the feed or move the hogs. Plaintiff moved the hogs to a farm belonging to Sydney Brook’s mother, but he was renting her land and the hogs were put in his feed lot on that farm and fed his corn. In June plaintiff was con *582 victed. and sentenced to ninety days in jail. While he was serving this sentence Sydney Brooks asked him if he should continue to feed and take care of the hogs which was dope by both defendants. In September, 1942, when plaintiff got out of jail, he went to work for Sydney Brooks and continued there until he was discharged December 13th following. The evidence was conflicting as to whether he had been paid his wages. lie testified that he must have had about $135 still due him; while Sydney Brooks testified all had been paid except $12.50, and that he tried to settle with plaintiff at that time but plaintiff would not agree to allow anything for the feed and care of the hogs, although he does not testify that feed.and care of the hogs were to be any part of his wages. In August, 1942, one of the hogs, which had originally been brought to the farm, gave birth to two pigs. When plaintiff and Sydney Brooks failed to settle their controversy in December, four hogs remained in the feed lot of Sydney Brooks until July 31, 1943, at which time the two older hogs were sold by the constable under an execution in favor of defendant Clellia Brooks upon a judgment for rent which she had secured against plaintiff in another justice of the peace court. The two hogs sold for $118 and, after satisfying the judgment and costs, there remained $21.62, which the constable tendered to plaintiff by a check made payable to plaintiff and his attorney, but the cheek has not been cashed. The other two hogs remained in the Brooks’ feed lot until one died in August, 1943, and the other was sold by Sydney Brooks in October, 1944, for $61.83. There was evidence that the reasonable value of the feed consumed by the hogs during the time they were there was $135, and that plaintiff had at all times refused to pay anything for such feed.

Plaintiff first contends that no agister’s lien arose in this case because the plaintiff was an employee of defendant, Sydney Brooks, and the bringing of his two hogs onto the land was merely incidental to his employment. He cites the case of Wright v. Waddell, 89 la., 350. That case is not in point. There the farm hand brought his stock onto the employer’s land as a part of the employment; not so in the present case, and besides he was not a regular employee of Brooks; he worked at irregular intervals.

Plaintiff next complains that the court erred in refusing his instructions No. 2, 7 and 8. These instructions submitted to the jury the question of whether defendants had lost or waived their lien because two of the hogs were seized and sold under an execution' issued on the judgment in favor of one of the defendants. It is generally held that where goods in the possession of one having a lien on them are attached at his suit or by his instigation his lien is lost. [37 C. J., See. 54, p. 335.] But under such circumstances the lien is lost only as to that portion so attached or surrendered and does not release the remaining portion from the burden of the whole ilen. [3 C. J. S., p. 1123.] Therefore, the seizing and sale of the two hogs under an execution on *583 behalf of one of the defendants was not, of itself, a release of the lien of both defendants as against the two remaining hogs. The cases cited by plaintiff are ruled on a set of facts where all of the property has been sold under a prior judgment by the defendant. In this case only part of the property was sold and the lien remained on the property not sold. The court did not err in refusing plaintiff’s instructions 2, 7 and 8 in their present form.

The most serious question presented concerns the refusal of the court to give plaintiff’s instructions No. 3 and 6, and the giving of defendants’ instructions Nos. 1, 2 and 4. Plaintiff’s refused instructions, among other things, sought to require the jury to find the amount of defendants lien, if any; while defendants’ instructions directed the jury to return a verdict for them if the jury should believe and find that defendants had a special lien on the hogs without requiring the jury to determine the amount of the lien. ■ As a result the jury found, in effect, that the plaintiff, at the time of the filing of the replevin suit, was the owner' of the hogs but that defendants had a lien thereon and plaintiff was not entitled to possession and .made no finding as to the amount of the lien.

When plaintiff filed his suit in the justice of the peace court he did not give bond and take possession of the hogs under the writ. Defendant’s answer admitted that plaintiff was the owner of the hogs at the time' the suit was filed; that the property was in their possession and that it had not been seized under any process, execution or attachment against the property; but denied he was entitled to the possession, because two of the hogs had been taken and sold under a proper execution and, also, that defendants had an agister’s lien on the hogs for feed and that plaintiff had not paid such lien and was therefore? not entitled to maintain his suit for possession. To this answer plaintiff replied, denying defendants were entitled to a lien and also that they had lost their lien, if any, by virtue of surrendering the possession of the two hogs to the constable under the execution.

In the trial of the case the question of ownership was not disputed.

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Bluebook (online)
194 S.W.2d 540, 239 Mo. App. 578, 1946 Mo. App. LEXIS 285, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sanders-v-brooks-moctapp-1946.