State ex rel. Copening v. Ryley, Wilson & Co.
This text of 76 Mo. App. 412 (State ex rel. Copening v. Ryley, Wilson & Co.) 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.
Opinion
It appears that these defendants and a firm known-as Beckham, Mercer & Company, each had a claim on McKinney who was a retail grocer in Vernon county and that they each brought suit before a justice of the-peace on their respective claims and each caused an attachment to be issued against the property of McKinney directed to the proper constable. The constable under the writ sued out by these defendants, levied on a lot of property consisting principally of groceries. And he, on the same day, under the attachment of' Beckham, Mercer & Company, levied on another and different lot of property, but of like character to that levied on under the writ sued out by these defendants. In other words he levied on a part of a stock of merchandise under one writ and the remaining part under the other writ. His return in each case was accompanied by an inventory showing the specific property., taken under each writ. The relator filed her separate interplea in each case claiming the property levied upon was hers and not McKinney’s; the claim being made to the property separately as it had been returned and inventoried by the constable. On trial in the justice’s court it was stipulated that the case of these defendants should be tried and that the result should govern the-case of Beckham, Mercer & Company. Relator being [415]*415successful on her interplea in the ease of these defendants, judgment was rendered for her in both eases. Both plaintiffs in the attachment suits appealed to the circuit court. While these appeals were pending the •circuit judge made an order in each case on the constable for a sale of the property. Notwithstanding the separate orders the constable sold the whole of both levies indiscriminately, at auction, and divided the money in proportion to the amount of appraisement which had been made of each lot of property. Duplicate accounts of the sale were attached to each of the orders of sale showing the apportionment of the proceeds. After-wards judgment was rendered in the circuit court in each case on stipulation for the relator as interpleader. The record of each judgment recites and finds that she was the owner and entitled to the possession of the property described in her interplea in each case and adjudges to her the separate sum apportioned by the constable in each case. Relator thereupon, as before stated, brought this action on the attachment bond given by these defendants claiming to have been damaged in the sum of $1,490, in the way of expenses, attorneys’ fees, etc., in prosecuting her interplea, and recovered judgment for $437, the full amount of the bond.
[417]*417
The other reason advanced is that the pleadings admit the levy by defendants to have been on all the goods. When the manner in which these cases were connected is considered, it becomes manifest that the answer is less specific than it should have been. It is, to a great degree, subject to the criticism relator makes on it; it is ambiguous. But we find that the point of its admitting the whole property in controversy was seized by these defendants, was not suggested at the trial. No instruction so states and the evidence was received of separate levies on separate property without objection. The trial proceeded upon the theory that no such admission existed and in fact there is no such admission, though it is perhaps subject to such construction. We therefore feel free to disallow the point at this stage.
Before another trial the petition and answer should be amended so as to refer definitely to the property seized by these defendants, and plaintiff’s instructions should be so worded that the jury will only assess against these defendants damages resulting from their proceedings and thus not leave it to surmise whether they may not have been held in part for the act of an independent party.
The judgment is reversed and cause remanded.
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76 Mo. App. 412, 1898 Mo. App. LEXIS 208, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-copening-v-ryley-wilson-co-moctapp-1898.