Shotwell v. Munroe

42 Mo. App. 669, 1890 Mo. App. LEXIS 432
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 23, 1890
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 42 Mo. App. 669 (Shotwell v. Munroe) 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
Shotwell v. Munroe, 42 Mo. App. 669, 1890 Mo. App. LEXIS 432 (Mo. Ct. App. 1890).

Opinion

Rombatjer, P. J.

John B. Haden obtained a judgment against A. H. Carter in the year 1886 for six hundred and sixty-one dollars and thirty-one cents. An execution on the judgment was levied on Carter’s property, on which the sheriff collected eighty-six dollars and eighty-one cents in cash, and, for the residue, Carter as principal and one Griffith as his security executed their note to Haden. The sheriff thereupon returned the execution showing these facts, and subsequently by the consent of Carter and Haden amended [672]*672his return, stating that, out of the eighty-six dollars and eighty-one cents paid to him by Carter, he applied twenty dollars towards payment of costs and sixty-six dollars and eighty-one cents towards payment of debt, and that for the residue of six hundred dollars Carter as principal and Griffith as security, executed their note-to Haden, whereupon, by order of plaintiff’s attorney/ he released the levy. The return concludes: “ Whether the six-hundred-dollar note, above mentioned, was accepted by plaintiff as payment, and in satisfaction of said judgment I do not undertake to-decide in this return.”

Thereupon an alias execution was issued against-Carter on said judgment, which the sheriff (John Fielder) levied on a stallion named “Fox Hunter,” a yearling stallion named “Don,” and other stock of the defendant Carter. Before sale under the levy, Shotwell, the plaintiff in the present proceeding, agreed with five-others, of whom the sheriff was one, to buy in the stock at execution sale. Concerning the agreement and the parties to it there is¡ no controversy. Plaintiff Shotwell claims that it was an agreement to buy in the stock on-joint account as a speculation, and is, on that point, supported by the testimony of some of his associates in the venture. Carter and the defendant in the present-proceeding claim that it was an agreement to buy it in for the benefit of Carter, and hold it in trust for him and resell it, and upon such resale to account to Carter for ^whatever surplus it would bring after payment of the-execution, and the expenses connected with the keep and sale of the stock. They are supported in that view by the testimony of the sheriff and another of the associates. The parties entering into this agreement were-friendly to Carter, who was or had been their pastor in the Campbellite church. They were all either members-of the church, or connected with it. Shotwell bought in-the stock in a lump under that agreement for the exact. [673]*673amount of the execution and costs, and under circumstances which leave little room for doubt that he did so under a prearrangement with the sheriff that the stock should be knocked off to him. The stock was' worth more than the execution debt, and the six associates executed their joint promissory note for the purpose of raising the money to pay for it. The money thus raised was used for the purpose of paying the execution, and incidentally to take up the six-hundred-dollar note executed by Carter and Griffith to Haden for the purpose of releasing the preceding levy.

. The execution sale took place in August, 1887. In September, 1887, Shotwell obtained from his associates, including the sheriff, a relinquishment of their interest in the stock on condition that he should pay the note executed by all of them jointly. Ninety-seven days after the sheriff’s sale, Shotwell sold the stallion, “ Pox Hunter,” for nine hundred and ninety dollars, which, according to his own evidence, was more than the amount of the note paid by him, and the expense of keeping all the stock until he disposed of it. He disposed of all the stock, with the exception of the young stallion, “Don,” prior to the institution of the present suit.

The above statement is deemed essential to a clear understanding of the issues in the case at bar, which is an action of replevin, and which originated as follows :

One Chamberlain obtained a judgment against Carter in March, 1888, for eight hundred and forty-seven dollars, and at once assigned it to Griffith. In February, 1889, Griffith caused an execution to be issued on said judgment in the name of Chamberlain to his use, which the sheriff levied on the young stallion, “Don,” claiming that it was Carter’s property, although in the possession of Shotwell. Shotwell thereupon filed a claim under the statute, but the sheriff took an indemnifying bond, and refused to release the levy ; whereupon the present [674]*674action, was instituted by Shotwell against the sheriff, and such proceedings were had therein that, upon its trial before a jury, the defendant recovered a verdict and judgment. The plaintiff, appealing, complains that the court erred in admitting certain evidence against his objection, and misdirected the jury as to the law.'

The admission of evidence, which is complained of, is that of the first execution in favor of Haden against Shotwell, and the sheriff ’ s return thereon. The sole objection urged is that the defendant is estopped from setting up the invalidity of the second sale, because he claims under the judgment now held by Griffith as assignee of Chamberlain, and, as Griffith got the benefit of the proceeds of the second execution sale, in having the note paid, on which he was security for Carter, he cannot deny the validity of the sale made on the alias execution.

That a defendant in an execution cannot stand by at the sale, permit his property to be sold, receive the direct benefit of the proceeds, and then claim against the purchaser that the sale was invalid, has been decided in Austin v. Loring, 63 Mo., 19. On the same principle we held in Fenwick v. Wheatley, 23 Mo. App. 641, that, where two executions are in the sheriff’s hands, and he makes a levy under both on certain lands, and a homestead is set apart on such levies, and the residue of the land is thereupon sold on one of the executions, but the proceeds of the sale are applied to the partial payment of the other likewise, the execution creditor who receives and retains such proceeds is thereby estopped from attacking the validity of the proceedings. But we are aware of no case, which goes to the extent of holding that one, who is in no sense a party to the record or execution sale, is estopped from attacking its validity, on the ground that he has derived some collateral and incidental benefit therefrom. Besides that, in this case, the sheriff holds under an execution in favor of Chamberlain, of whom [675]*675Griffith is the mere assignee, and there is not even a pretense of estoppel against Chamberlain as his claim did not ripen into a judgment until long after the execution sale on the Haden execution, and he had no connection whatever with that execution, nor had Griffith any such connection as far as the record discloses. The objection, therefore, is not well taken.

The court gave six instructions in favor of plaintiff out of thirteen instructions asked. We do not deem it necessary to set out more than four of these instructions for the purpose of showing that the court submitted the plaintiff’s case to' the jury under the most favorable view of the law admissible under the evidence. These instructions are as follows : *

“7. The court instructs the jury that, although they may believe from the evidence in the cause that all or a part of plaintiff’s five partners in the purchase of the animals of A. H.

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Bluebook (online)
42 Mo. App. 669, 1890 Mo. App. LEXIS 432, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/shotwell-v-munroe-moctapp-1890.