Schroeder v. Mason

25 Mo. App. 190, 1887 Mo. App. LEXIS 290
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedMarch 22, 1887
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 25 Mo. App. 190 (Schroeder v. Mason) 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
Schroeder v. Mason, 25 Mo. App. 190, 1887 Mo. App. LEXIS 290 (Mo. Ct. App. 1887).

Opinion

Thompson, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

On the twenty-third day of August, 1884, the Jacob Ambs Distilling Company, a trading corporation doing business in the city of St. Louis, failed in business, being largely indebted to several parties, among them the Continental Bank of St. Louis. On the same day the bank caused an attachment to be levied by the defendant, Mason, as sheriff of the city of St. Louis, upon a quantity of whiskey and other goods, in the hands of the plaintiff, at his place of business, in the city of St. Louis, as the property of the Jacob Ambs Distilling Company. The goods were sold under the attachment and were wholly lost to the plaintiff. He has brought this action against the sheriff and the Continental Bank for damages for their conversion. The ease was tried by the court, sitting as a jury, and a verdict and judgment were rendered in favor of the plaintiff. The points on which the appellants rely relate to the instructions given and refused, and to the propriety of the verdict which the court gave.

I. It is sufficient to say, without stating the facts which the evidence tended to show, that the instructions which the court gave of its own motion were carefully drawn, strictly correct in point of law, and show that [192]*192the court, as the trier of the facts, decided, the facts under a correct view of the applicatory principles of law.

II. The instructions which were tendered by the defendants and refused by the court were, so far as they were correct in point of law, merely cumulative statements of principles of law, applicable to the evidence declared by the court in the instructions given.

The one numbered three might well have been given, but we can not see that the court erred in refusing it. So far as not covered by the instructions given, it was a cautionary instruction, directing the attention of the court to the facts and circumstances which the court should take into consideration as the trier of the facts in making up its verdict. It can not be supposed, especially in view of the state of the evidence, which will hereafter be observed upon, that the defendants were in any way prejudiced by the refusal to give this instruction, especially since the case was tried by the court and not by a jury.

The second and fourth instructions required the court, sitting as a jury, to find for the defendants if it should believe from the evidence that the plaintiff knew, at the time he received the goods, sued for, that the Jacob Ambs Distilling Company was insolvent, and that its officers were about to make a transfer of its assets for the purpose of hindering, delaying, and defrauding its creditors. This instruction was rightly refused. If the case had been tried before a jury, the giving of it would have been plainly prejudicial to the plaintiff. There was evidence in the case tending to show that transfers of the property of the Jacob Ambs Distilling Company had been made on the day of their failure to Jacob Ambs himself, and to sundry persons related to Jacob Ambs and his sons, who were the stockholders in the corporation. The evidence also tended strongly, if not decisively, to show that the goods which the plaintiff received from the Jacob Ambs Distilling [193]*193Company, which were levied on by the sheriff under an attachment of the Continental Bank, were received by him from the distilling company in the tona fide liquidation of an existing indebtedness of the distilling company to him, for moneys which he had loaned them from time to time. There was no evidence tending to show that the plaintiff in any way aided and abetted the transfers of the other property of the Jacob Ambs Distilling Company to Jacob Ambs, and to the relatives of the Ambses already spoken of. If the case had been tried by a jury, such an instruction would have made the rights of the plaintiff depend upon the validity of the dealings of those in control of. the business of the distilling company with other persons, with the tona fides of which dealings the plaintiff could not be in any way charged, legally or morally. The State to use v. Mason, 24 Mo. App. 321.

The fifth instruction offered by the defendants and refused, declared the law to be, “that if the Jacob Ambs Distilling Company was insolvent, on the eighteenth of August, 1884, and if thereafter, on the twenty-third day of the same month, the officers of said corporation made a transfer of its assets to the president of said company, then said transfer was fraudulent as to the creditors, even though the transfer was made to secure indebtedness due to the said president.” We need not consider whether or not this instruction is good in point of law. Possibly, the two judges of this court, who, alone, participate in this decision, would be divided upon it, as they were upon a similar question in. Forster v. Mullanphy Planing Mill Co. (16 Mo. App. 150). It is sufficient to say that it was wholly irrelevant to the issue on trial. The issue on trial was whether the goods which had been turned over, by the Jacob Ambs Distilling Company, to the plaintiff, were turned over to him in the payment of a tona fide indebtedness from them to him, and not whether other [194]*194transfers, which the Jacob Ambs Distilling Company made to other creditors, were or were not valid.

III. The assignment of error that the verdict should have been for the appellants, under the evidence, is not even debatable upon this record. This was an action at law, and the court tried the facts, sitting as a jury. The decision of the court upon the facts has, therefore, the same conclusive effect upon this appeal which the verdict of a jury would have. It is not contended that there was not substantial evidence to support this verdict. At the close of the plaintiff’s evidence, his case was completely made out. The defendants’ evidence, instead of weakening the case made by the plaintiff, greatly strengthened it, and made the preponderance of evidence in its favor so conclusive that if, in a case of this kind, a jury had decided for the defendant, it would have been the plain duty of the trial court to set the verdict aside and grant a new trial. There were some circumstances casting suspicion upon the conduct of the managing officers of the Jacob Ambs Distilling Company, in the general matter of their failure — the division of their ■ assets between a member of the company and relatives of the stockholders of the company, and the destruction of some of the books, which contained a history of their business transactions. It is true that, with the goods thus received from the Jacob Ambs Distilling Company, purchased at sheriff’s sale, under the attachment, the plaintiff shortly after went into business at the old stand of the company, taking in one of the Ambses as his partner, and another as an employe, which was a circumstance of suspicion ; but all this was carefully and fully gone into on the evidence, and it was for the court, as the trier of the facts, to show whether it was sufficiently explained. Aside from this, the transactions between the distilling company and this plaintiff were made, by the evidence of the plaintiff himself, by the evidence of witnesses called by the defendants, and by the books of the distilling company, to stand out clear and unimpeached‘. [195]

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48 Mo. App. 169 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1892)
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
25 Mo. App. 190, 1887 Mo. App. LEXIS 290, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/schroeder-v-mason-moctapp-1887.