Sherwood v. Neal

41 Mo. App. 416, 1890 Mo. App. LEXIS 296
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedMay 13, 1890
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 41 Mo. App. 416 (Sherwood v. Neal) 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
Sherwood v. Neal, 41 Mo. App. 416, 1890 Mo. App. LEXIS 296 (Mo. Ct. App. 1890).

Opinion

Biggs, J.

Plaintiff seeks to recover from the defendant Neal the possession of a stallion. There was an order of delivery, and the horse was taken from Neal and delivered to the plaintiff. The amended petition contains two counts. The first is in the usual form of suits in replevin, and the other sets forth that, on the fourth day of April, 1886, the plaintiff delivered to Neal the possession of the horse, under a written contract. The contract referred to was filed with the petition, and it was in substance as follows: Plaintiff agreed to deliver possession of the horse to Neal, and Neal was to have the care and custody of the animal for two years, provided he complied with the conditions of the contract, which were to the effect that Neal should thoroughly train the horse to trot and bear all expenses for feeding, sheltering and otherwise caring for the animal during the time. As compensation, Neal was to receive one-half of the earnings of the stallion during the two years, and the other half he agreed to pay to plaintiff’s agent, Hr. E. T. Robberson, payments to be made at regular periods, to be determined and fixed by Robberson. It was also agreed, in consideration of the services to be performed by Neal, that the title to one-half of the stallion was to be vested in Dr. Robberson, as trustee, and, at the expiration of the two years, the animal was to be sold and one-half of the proceeds was to go to Robberson for Neal. But it was distinctly stipulated that the title to the horse should not vest in Neal, but that one-half interest was to remain in plaintiff, and that the other half was to vest in Robberson as trustee, subject to be divested upon a failure by Neal to carry out his part of the contract. It was also expressly agreed that, if Neal failed in any manner to fully and fairly comply with the conditions of his contract, he was to forfeit all rights thereunder. Plaintiff then averred that he delivered the horse to N eal under the contract, and that the latter had in every particular failed to comply with its conditions. [420]*420i. e., he had failed to train the horse, and, in fact he was entirely incompetent to properly perform snch duties; that the stallion had earned over five hundred dollars, and that Neal had failed to pay Dr. Robberson any part thereof, although the time for such payments had been fixed by Robberson as required by the contract, of which Neal had due notice. Plaintiff asked judgment against Neal for the amount of the earnings of the horse.

After the suit had been instituted, the defendant Fox was made a party because he claimed a lien on the horse for feed furnished, and also for his' services in training him.

Neal’s answer tendered the general issue, and that of Fox contained only the statement of a counter-claim. It alleged that Fox was the keeper and trainer of horses; that in November, 1887, the stallion had been entrusted to his care by Neal; that, under á contract with Neal, he boarded and trained the horse, and that .there was due him therefor the sum of seventy dollars and fifty cents. Judgment was then asked for that amount, and that it be enforced as a special lien against the horse. To this answer the plaintiff filed a replication. The parties went to trial on the issues thus framed, and the' judgment of the court was that the plaintiff either return the horse to Fox, or pay him the sum of five hundred dollars (the value of the horse). From this judgment the plaintiff has appealed.

The plaintiff read in evidence the contract signed by him and Neal. He then introduced evidence tending to show that, at the time the contract was made, he (the plaintiff) was in possession of the horse ; that Neal received the animal from him under and by virtue of the contract; that, when the suit was begun, the horse was still held by Neal under the contract and in no other way ; and that Neal had failed to comply with the conditions of the contract in the manner stated in [421]*421the petition. It was disclosed by the evidence that the horse belonged to the plaintiff ’ s minor child; that it was a gift to the child from a friend of the family, and that the plaintiff held possession of it as the natural guardian of the child, but had failed to give bond as such guardian, as required by law. The defendant Fox introduced evidence tending to prove the averments of his answer, and that the charges made by him were reasonable and customary. The plaintiff objected to all testimony in support of Fox’s counter-claim, because the defendant Neal was clothed with a personal trust in respect of the care and training of the horse, which he could not delegate to another ; that the evidence tended to show that Fox was aware of Neal’s contract, and that, if he rendered the alleged service under a contract with Neal, he did so with the knowledge that Neal had no right to bind the plaintiff by any such agreement. The defendant Neal introduced no testimony.

The following instructions indicate the theories of the plaintiff and defendants respectively. The defendants asked, and the court gave, the following instruction: “That if the evidence in this cause shows that ‘ Shield’ was, at the time of the. institution of this suit, the property of Pansy Sherwood, a minor under the age of eighteen years, and that Thomas A. Sherwood is the father and natural guardian of his said child, and that said horse ‘Shield’ was not derived to said Pansy from her said father Thomas A. Sherwood, nor from her mother, and that the said Thomas A. Sherwood, natural guardian as aforesaid, had not and has not given security as guardian and curator of said minor,, as other guardians and curators are in such cases by law required to do, then, in such event, the plaintiff is not entitled to recover of the defendant Fox the possession of said horse, and the issues must be found in favor of said defendant Fox.”

[422]*422The plaintiff asked the court to give the following instructions, which the court declined to do :

“1. That a natural guardian, such as the evidence shows the plaintiff to be, who has not given bond as required by law, and from whom the property has not been derived, who makes a contract in writing whereby he transfers the minor’s property to a party, conditioned that if the conditions be not performed, that such contract shall be void and a'forfeiture of all rights acquired thereunder shall occur, then, in case of nonperformance of such conditions, the natural guardian may maintain replevin for such property, and the party who has received it is estopped to deny title in his grantor as aforesaid, and is estopped also to set up in a third person title or right to the possession of said property.
“2. That said contract was a special and conditional one, creating a personal trust and confidence in said Neal, and that he had no right, power or authority whatever to delegate that personal confidence and trust thus created to defendant Pox, and the act of said Neal in transferring the control of said property to said Pox, as shown by the evidence, violated the terms and conditions of said contract, and rendered the same void and of no effect.”

Other instructions were asked and given, but the foregoing are sufficient for a proper understanding of the question we propose to discuss.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
41 Mo. App. 416, 1890 Mo. App. LEXIS 296, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sherwood-v-neal-moctapp-1890.