State ex rel. Burris v. Edmundson

71 Mo. App. 172, 1897 Mo. App. LEXIS 445
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedMay 4, 1897
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 71 Mo. App. 172 (State ex rel. Burris v. Edmundson) 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
State ex rel. Burris v. Edmundson, 71 Mo. App. 172, 1897 Mo. App. LEXIS 445 (Mo. Ct. App. 1897).

Opinion

Bland, P. J.

The petition in this ease is as follows:

“State of Missouri at the relation and to the use of L. Burris, plaintiff, v. P. . C. Edmundson, T. D. Melton, Isaac Harlin, ' James A. Evans, C. T. Walton, J. W. Reed, J. A. Stewart, I. T. Neeley, and W. H. Harty, defendants.

In the Circuit Court of - Stoddard County, Missouri, September Term, 1896, at Bloomfield.

“Plaintiff states that it brings this suit at the relation and to the use of L. Burris, and states that heretofore, the defendant P. C. Edmundson, with the defendants, T. D. Melton, Isaac Harlin, James A. Evans, C. T. Walton, J. W. Reed, J. A. Stewart, I. T. Neeley, and W. H. Harty, as sureties, duly executed under their hands and seals a bond to the state of Missouri for the faithful performance of the duties of said office, said bond being dated August 9, 1893, and the conditions thereof being in words and figures as follows, to wit: ‘Now, therefore, if the said P. C. Edmundson shall execute all process to him directed and delivered, pay over all moneys received by him by virtue of his office and in every respect discharge all the duties of constable, then this obligation to be void; otherwise to remain in full force and effect.’

“Said bond can not be filed herewith for the reason that it is in the custody and under the control of the county clerk of Stoddard county, Missouri, who will not allow the same to be withdrawn from his office; but a didy certified copy thereof is herewith filed and marked exhibit ‘A.’ Relator states that [176]*176the defendant P. C. Edmundson has been guilty of a breach of said bond in this — that on the - of January, 1894, the defendant, said P. 0. Edmundson, as constable of said Duck Creek township, under color of his office as such constable, and without an execu-, tion or a fee bill, as relator verily believes, but under and by virtue of a written memorandum of some kind, the contents of which relator does not certainly know, but which relator believes was a paper issued by T. D. Melton, justice of the peace of said Duck Creek township, containing a memorandum of the costs in the case of the State of Missouri v. Sophia Miller, which said costs had been adjudged against the relator, did seize and take into his possession under said paper and by virtue of his said office, two horses and one buggy, the property of this relator, and thereafter immediately did advertise the same for sale to pay said costs and did in due course of time sell the same for that purpose.

“Relator alleges that the value of the horses and buggy was three hundred dollars, and that at the time of their seizure and sale as above set forth, he was a citizen, householder, and head of a family residing with his family in Stoddard county, Missouri, and as such, was entitled under the laws of the state of Missouri to hold said horses and said buggy exempt from sale to satisfy the costs in said ease of the State of Missouri v. Sophia Miller.

“Relator further alleges that defendant, P. C. Edmundson, did not advise him of his right as the head of a family to hold said property exempt from sale for the satisfaction of said costs, but the said P. C. Edmundson seized and sold said property in violation of the rights of this relator by reason of which the defendants have become liable to pay the relator the sum of three hundred dollars, with interest thereon from the-day of January, 1894.

[177]*177“Wherefore relator prays judgment against the defendants for one thousand dollars, the penalty of said bond, and that execution issue against the defendants for the sum of three hundred dollars and interest thereon from the - day of January, 1894, for damages aforesaid and for costs.

“Relator further states that he filed his suit against the defendants on said bond for the wrongs herein complained of on the twenty-fifth day of July, 1894, in the circuit court of Stoddard county, at Bloomfield, and that at the March term of said circuit court in March, 1896, the relator herein took a nonsuit.

“Fort & Yah Buskirk,

“Attorneys for Relator.”

A general demurrer to this petition was filed by the respondent, which was by the court sustained, and judgment entered that plaintiff take nothing by his suit. From this judgment plaintiff appealed to this court.

Tlpieadmgctice:

[178]*178ties on official principal under color of 9fiice. [177]*177The demurrer being a general one did not reach any defective or uncertain allegation in the petition, and if by fair and reasonable intendment, the petition impliedly stated a cause of action, the demurrer should have been overruled. Eads v. Gaines, 58 Mo. App. 587. The argument made by respondent in his brief is, that unless the memorandum mentioned in the petition was such an instrument or process that the constable’s sureties would have been liable if he (the constable) should have refused to serve it, then the trial court ruled right in sustaining the demurrer, and cites State ex rel. v. McDonough, 9 Mo. App. 63, as authority in support of this position. The breach charged in that ease was that “McDonough without warrant, or authority o’f law, as chief of police, and by virtue of, and [178]*178under color of his office, wrongfully and maliciously arrested the relator and imprisoned him. Judge Hayden, in L ^ ' delivering the opinion of the court m the case, uses this language: “The fact that under color of his office, an officer does an act which is in its inception beyond, and out of the line of his duty, does not show or tend to show in any case he did not faithfully perform it; and if he does this, why should his sureties be held, whose obligation can not be extended beyond the terms of the bond? And cites Ex parte Reed, 4 Hill, 572, in support of this doctrine, where it is said, where there was “no authority, there was no office, nothing official.” In the case of People v. Schuyler, 4 N. Y. 173, the Reed case is commented on and disapproved. In the latter case it was held that a sheriff and his sureties were liable on his official bond, when he, by virtue of a writ of attachment against one, seized' the goods of another. A like rule obtains in this state by a uniform course of decision. State ex rel. v. Moore, 19 Mo. 370; State ex rel. v. Hadlock, 52 Mo. App. 297; State ex rel. v. Hope, 88 Mo. 430; State ex rel. v. Fitzpatrick, 64 Mo. 184. It is not averred in the petition that’ the officer seized the goods by virtue of an execution or fee bill issued by a justice, but that as constable without any fee bill or execution, he seized and sold the goods, and that he did these things under and by virtue of a written memorandum of some kind, the contents of which the relator did not certainly know, but which he believed was a paper issued by one Melton, a justice of the peace, containing a memorandum of the costs in the case of the State v. Sophia Miller, which had been adjudged against the relator. The relator assigns as breaches of the constable’s bond, that the property levied upon and sold was exempt from such levy and sale, and the failure of the con[179]*179stable to apprise him of his statutory exemption rights. In this state of the pleading the appellant, on trial, could not have shown that the levy and sale were made without legal process, for he does not count upon the want of authority in the constable to make the levy.

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Bluebook (online)
71 Mo. App. 172, 1897 Mo. App. LEXIS 445, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-burris-v-edmundson-moctapp-1897.