Sheriff v. Bartholow

69 Mo. 186
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedOctober 15, 1878
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 69 Mo. 186 (Sheriff v. Bartholow) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sheriff v. Bartholow, 69 Mo. 186 (Mo. 1878).

Opinion

Norton, J.

This is a suit on an indemnifying bond given by defendants to the sheriff of Washington county against all damages and costs which he might sustain in consequence of the seizure and sale of property claimed by plaintiff', Deggendorf, and levied upon in virtue of an execution in the hands of the sheriff in favor of the banking house of Bartholow, Lewis, & Go., and against the Washington Mining & Zinc Company. The property levied upon consisted, among other things, of 150 barrels of oxide of zinc, 98 barrels of which it is alleged were sold under said levy. The suit is prosecuted in the name of the sheriff' for the use of said Deggendorf, who alleges that he was the owner of said zinc at the time it was levied upon and sold, and also that he was damaged by the seizure' and sale of it in the sum of $2,000. The answer of defendants puts in issue the allegations of the petition and avers substantially that the 98 barrels of zinc claimed to have been levied upon by the sheriff were never sold by him, and that the zinc that was sold was not the property of Deggendorf. The cause was tried by the court, a jury having been waived, and resulted in a judgment for plaintiff' in the sum of $1,116.95.

On the trial each party offered evidence tending to prove his theory of the case. During its progress many exceptions were taken, but as only those which relate to the action of the court in giving and refusing instructions, have been brought to our attention in the brief of counsel, we will confine ourselves to a consideration of them. The court refused all the instructions asked both by plaintiff' and defendants, and gave, of its own motion, the following, which were excepted to.

1. The court instructs the court sitting as a jury, that if it find from the evidence that, on the 5th day of August, [192]*1921874, Joseph Deggendorf was the owner and in possession of 98 barrels of oxide of zinc, on which the sheriff of Washington county had previously levied, and for the delivery of which said Deggendorf liad executed and delivered to said sheriff a delivery bond, and that said sheriff' on said 5th day of August, 1874, sold said property, the court will find for the plaintiff for the value of the property so sold at the date of sale, and assess damages accordingly, with interest at six per cent, thereon.

2. The court instructs the court sitting as a jury, that if it shall find from the evidence in the cause that the defendants herein recovered judgment in St. Louis county against the Washington Mining & Zinc Company, and caused an execution thereon to issue to the sheriff of Washington county, and that said sheriff, in pursuance of the mandate of said writ, and in the execution thereof, levied the same on 150 barrels of zinc, the property of the plaintiff; and that he notified the sheriff, who was, in the execution of said writ, the agent of defendants, that the property was his, and not that of said company, and that after said notice was given as aforesaid, the sheriff, as the agent of defendants, acting by virtue of their commands in said writ, and by direction of their attorney on the ground at the time, did sell 98 barrels of zinc, as the property specified in the levy, by which authority alone he could sell, and that the attorney of defendants was present at the sale, superintending the same and received and receipted for the money arising thereupon, then, and in such case, if the court shall find that the zinc was plaintiff's property, defendants are estopped to deny that the property sold was part and parcel of that embraced in the levy, and the plaintiff’ may recover therefor in this action.

5. The court declares the law to be, that the sheriff, in making the levy and sale under the execution of Bartholow, Lewis & Co., was the agent both of them and of the Washington Mining & Zinc .Company, the defendants in the execution, and if the court shall find that the sheriff' [193]*193under said execution levied upon the property of said defendants, including 150 barrels of zinc, to satisfy said execution, and that at the time of the levy thereon the present plaintiff notified the sheriff that said zinc was his property, that said company owned no personal property there; that he was making zinc, at his own expense, in the operation of the works, then such a warning was a continuous notice to the sheriff and said plaintiff in the execution, that the zinc produced, and being produced, was not the property of defendant, in said execution; and although the court may believe that the mineral sold under the execution was different zinc from that levied on by virtue of the execution, and that the plaintiff was present at the sale and knew this fact, and made no objection to the sale thereof, as the property levied on, he is not estopped to sue the defendants upon the indemnity bond by reason of such silence, for they were still affected by the notice before mentioned herein.

6. The court declares the law to be, that if the plaintiff in this action was the agent of the Washington Mining & Zinc Company, in the management and operation of its works, he could not, in such event, without the consent of said company, operate the works of said company and claim the products thereof for his own benefit and behoof; but on the contrary, in such case, any contracts entered into by plaintiff' with third parties, and the issues and profits arising therefrom, less the cost of producing the same, so far as paid by plaintiff, are the property of said company, unless, from the evidence, the court shall find that the agency or fiduciary relation between the plaintiff and said company had terminated before the property levied on was produced.

9. The court declares the law to be, that the law presumes the zinc sold by the sheriff to be a part of that embraced in the levy, and the burden of proof rests on the defendants to show that such was not the case, to the satisfaction of the court sitting as a jury.

[194]*19410. The court instructs the court, sitting as a jury, that defendants, (being plaintiffs in the execution under •which said sheriff acted in making his levy,) are conclusively bound by and estopped from denying the statements of the sheriff in his return, and the legal and necessary conclusions arising therefrom in this action; and that all evidence in the cause tending to show that there was in fact no levy made on the zinc, is incompetent, and ought not to be considered.

"When the issues presented by the pleadings are considered, it would seem that the above instructions are peculiarly applicable to them. All the questions at issue and raised by the pleadings are fully submitted by them, and plaintiff’s right to recover predicated on the establishment by him of the facts, that the sheriff' levied the execution upon 98 barrels of zinc, that at the time of the levy the zinc was his property, and that it was subsequently sold under the levy.

i. execution: shsiiff *s r6tum When conclusive!

That a levy was made is established by the return of the officer indorsed on the execution, and this is conclusive as to that fact, in the present action, on the defendants, who were plaintiffs in the execution, and who admitted the fact of the levy in the indemnifying bond sued upon. Held in the case of Hallowell v. Page, 24 Mo. 590 : “ To permit the parties to an action to controvert the truth of the rotura of the officer deputed by law to serve the process, would produce great delay and embarrassment in the administration of justice.

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Bluebook (online)
69 Mo. 186, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sheriff-v-bartholow-mo-1878.