Standard Foundry Co. v. Schloss

43 Mo. App. 304, 1891 Mo. App. LEXIS 36
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedJanuary 13, 1891
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 43 Mo. App. 304 (Standard Foundry Co. v. Schloss) 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
Standard Foundry Co. v. Schloss, 43 Mo. App. 304, 1891 Mo. App. LEXIS 36 (Mo. Ct. App. 1891).

Opinion

Rohbatjer, P. J.

This is an action for the conversion of part óf a “jointing machine.” Both plaintiff and defendant claim title under the “ Iron and Metal Company,” and the evidence concedes that the plaintiff had complete title to the article at the date of its partial conversion, unless the defendant bought it from the common vendor prior to the plaintiff’s purchase, or unless the plaintiff is concluded by the record of a former suit.

For the purposes of establishing those defenses, the defendant gave evidence tending to show that he bought the article in controversy at a trustee’s sale of the vendor ’ s property prior to plaintiff ’ s purchase ; that this sale was conducted at public outcry, and, although the article was named in the trustee’s advertisement as a “ saw-table and arbor,”,and was offered for sale as a saw-table or machine, yet the vendor’s agents pointed out to him the “jointing machine” as the article sold by that designation. The defendant also gave evidence tending to show that, after the sale, the plaintiff removed “the jointing machine” from the premises where it was sold, and stored it with the Pacific Warehouse Company ; that, thereupon, the defendant brought a suit of replevin against the plaintiff and the Warehouse Company for “one saw-taple and arbor” and on that writ took from the Warehouse Company the “jointing machine/” that in that suit such" proceedings were had that it was dismissed against the present plaintiff, and judgment was rendered in favor of the present defendant against the Warehouse Company for possession of “ one saw-table and arbor.” The defendant claims that the property involved in that litigation [307]*307was the same which is involved in the present litigation, and, hence, that such judgment was a bar to the present proceeding. The cause was tried by a jury, and the trial resulted in a verdict and judgment lor defendant. The,plaintiff, appealing, assigns for error the rulings of the court on the evidence and instructions.

There is no evidence in the case, that “saw-table and arbor” and “jointing machine” are interchangeable names for one and the same article; nor that they are not well known by the terms employed to designate them respectively. Whatever evidence there is on the subject tends to show that the only thing they have in common is that-they are both machinery. A jointing machine is constructed entirely of iron, and weighs from five to six tons; a saw-table is constructed entirely of wood and its weight is insignificant. The uncontroverted evidence shows" that the value of the article in controversy is above §30, and that the only memorandum of a sale made to the defendant, and under which he necessarily claim's title, is the following entry made by the seller: “One saw-table and arbor, sold to S. Schloss, $36.” It is also conceded that the seller, after the sale and upon the payment of the purchase money, gave an order to the defendant upon the party in charge of the premises in the following words: “Please deliver to Stephen Schloss, one iron fan, one cupola, one saw-table ■ and arbor” and that the article in controversy is not claimed by the defendant to be either an iron fan or a cupola.

The first error complained of is the admission .of the papers in the replevin suit, as evidence of a former recovery by the defendant in the present suit.

At the time of the introduction and reading of each of said papers, including said judgment, in evidence, the plaintiff objected thereto on the ground that, on the face of said paper and on the face of the record of said suit of which said paper purported to be a part, it appeared that the subject- matter of said paper, and the [308]*308subject-matter, sought to be recovered in said suit and described therein, was described as a saw-table and arbor, and not as a jointing machine ; and that there was no evidence introduced in this suit that said names were identical in designation; that the judgment of Justice Byron read in evidence purported to be for the recovery of a saw-table and arbor by name and not a jointing machine by name, and that there was no evidence that said names were usually or ever used interchangeably to identify the same object; and, furthermore, that there was no evidence of the identity of the subject-matter of said suit with that of the suit at bar; and, furthermore, that the judgment of Justice Byron was in terms rendered against the Pacific Warehouse Company after the Standard Foundry Company had been dismissed from the suit; that there is no judgment against the Standard Foundry Company, and no evidence was introduced to show that the plaintiff was privy to said judgment or ought to be bound thereby. These objections the court overruled, and the plaintiff excepted’and still excepts.

The action of replevin before a justice is purely statutory. The plaintiff is bound to describe in his statement the article claimed by him, and, although the proceeding is in rem, the judgment can affect only the property described in- the statement, and the justice can acquire no jurisdiction over a different article than the one described, notwithstanding that the constable may have taken such different article under the. order of .delivery. To illustrate: If the plaintiff claims in his statement a bay mare of the value of $50, and the constable takes upon the writ a black stallion of the value of $500, whereupon the justice renders a judgment for the plaintiff for the possession of the bay mare, it could not be contended that the defendant was estopped by the judgment from questioning the plaintiff’s title to the black stallion.

[309]*309Now, in the case at bar, Schloss sued the Warehouse Company before the justice for the possession of a saw-table and arbor. The constable took a jointing machine under the writ, and the justice rendered judgment in favor of Schloss for the possession of a saw-table and arbor. If the two articles were essentially different, that judgment could in no way affect the title of the present plaintiff to the jointing machine, even if the plaintiff were a party to the record.

But it further appeared that the plaintiff was not a party to the record. That the judgment was rendered against its bailee, that is, against one who presumably claimed under the plaintiff, does not make it conclusive on the plaintiff. A judgment against the bailor is conclusive on the bailee; but not vice versa, in a case like this. The plaintiff here claims no rights under the party, against whom the judgment was rendered,, nor is any right claimed by such party against the plaintiff. We, therefore, conclude that the court committed error by admitting the record of the judgment in evidence. Since a replevin suit does not determine the question of title but the question of possession only, it has been held that a judgment in such a suit is not conclusive as to the title even between the parties themselves. Miller v. Walther, 3 Mo. App. 99.

It results from the foregoing that the court also erred in refusing the following instruction asked by the plaintiff:

“The court instructs the jury that, under the evidence, the judgment of Justice Byron is not a bar to this suit.” And in giving the following instruction on behalf of the defendant:

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Bluebook (online)
43 Mo. App. 304, 1891 Mo. App. LEXIS 36, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/standard-foundry-co-v-schloss-moctapp-1891.