State ex rel. Fowler v. Chaney

49 Mo. App. 511, 1892 Mo. App. LEXIS 255
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedMay 3, 1892
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 49 Mo. App. 511 (State ex rel. Fowler v. Chaney) 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. Fowler v. Chaney, 49 Mo. App. 511, 1892 Mo. App. LEXIS 255 (Mo. Ct. App. 1892).

Opinion

Biggs, J.

In 1886, the defendant Chaney was a constable in Hickory county, where this suit originated. The present action is on his official bond, the conditions of which the relator charges he violated by wrongfully releasing certain personal property, which had been seized by him in an attachment suit before a justice of the peace, in which suit the relator was plaintiff and one Barney Pitts, defendant. Chaney admitted that he had attached a lor of cattle as tke property of [514]*514Pitts; that the attachment had been sustained and judgment by default entered against Pitts; that a special execution was issued against the attached property, and that while he so held the property he released nineteen head of cattle from the levy under the execution and delivered them to Mrs. Emily Pitts, the wife of Barney Pitts, He undertook to justify the release upon the ground that Pitts was a resident of the state of Missouri and was the head of a family, that he had absconded from the state at the date of the attachment, and that his wife had claimed the property as exempt. On a trial in the circuit court of Hickory county there was a judgment for the defendants, but, on appeal to the Kansas City Court of Appeals, the judgment was reversed and the cause remanded. State ex rel. v. Chaney, 36 Mo. App. 513. Afterwards, there was a change of venue to the circuit court of Greene county, where the relator took the position that, under the decision of the Kansas City Court of Appeals, the circuit court must enter a judgment for the penalty of the bond, and that the only matter left in dispute was the amount of the damages, all other questions both of law and fact having been conclusively adjudicated and settled adversely to the defendants. The court, being of this opinion, entered a judgment on the relator’s motion for the penalty of the bond and directed an inquiry of damages. Neither party requiring a jury, the inquiry was had before the court, in which the court found that the relator had been damaged in the sum of $112; and, thereupon, the court ordered that execution issue for that amount, together with interest thereon at the rate of one hundred per cent, per annum from the return day of the execution in the attachment sy.it, which amounted in the aggregate, as ascertained by the court, to the sum of $500. From that judgment the defendants have appealed to this court.

[515]*515There is no sufficient evidence m the transcript of the filing of what purports to be a bill of exceptions. There is a recital by the clerk, who made the transcript, that the bill of exceptions was filed in the office of the -clerk of the circuit court, but the transcript shows no record entry to that effeot, neither does the bill itself contain a file-mark. The mere recital by the clerk in the transcript that the bill was filed is not sufficient. We must, therefore, dispose of this case on the record proper.

Where the judgment entry clearly shows, as it does in this case, the nature of the motion, the court’s action thereon may be reviewed as a matter of error as contradistinguished from matter of exception. The question then is, whether the court committed error in sustaining the relator’s motion for judgment without giving the defendant an opportunity to retry the cause. The statute makes it the duty of an appellate court to award a new trial, reverse or affirm the judgment or •decision of the circuit court, or give such judgment as such court ought to have given, as to them as shall seem agreeable to law.” R. S. 1889, sec. 2304. Where a cause is remanded with special directions for a certain .judgment, as is often done instead of making judgment in the appellate court, there is nothing for a trial court to do but to follow the directions. The mandate is.a sufficient warrant for its judgment. Chouteau v. Allen, 74 Mo. 56; Shroyer v. Nichell, 67 Mo. 589; Hurck v. Erskine, 50 Mo. 116. But not so where there has-been a simple reversal and remanding, unless legal propositions only are involved which depend solely upon conceded or written evidence, the legal effect of which the ■court construed on the first appeal. Treadway v. Johnson, 39 Mo. App. 176. In such a case there would be nothing for the trial court to retry, and its duty would be to enter judgment in conformity with the [516]*516opinion of the superior court. It is only in such cases that appellate courts direct judgment to be entered. But we have no such case here. The Kansas City Court of Appeals simply reversed the judgment and remanded the cause. That court only decided that, upon the record as presented to it, it appeared that Pitts was a non-resident of the state of Missouri, and that, as he was not entitled to exemptions, his wife could not claim them.

The decision exclusively settled, the point, that upon the facts as presented by that record, Pitts was a non-resident of the state at the date of the issuance of the attachment writ, and that, this being true, Mrs. Pitts was not entitled to her exemptions; but it did not conclusively settle the fact that Pitts was actually a non-resident. The conclusion of the court on this question of facts seems to have been based on the assumption that non-residency was the only ground for the attachment, and, the attachment being sustained, both Pitts and his wife were concluded by the finding; whereas the amended petition, which has been filed since the case was remanded, states that another ground for the attachment was that Pitts was about to remove his property and effects out of the state with intent to hinder, delay and defraud his creditors. This pleading tendered a new issue, which on a retrial made it competent for the defendant Chaney, in order to justify his action in releasing the cattle, to introduce evidence to show, if it was a fact, .that the attachment was sustained on the other ground, and that Pitts was a resident of the state of Missouri at the date of the attachment, but had absconded or had absented himself therefrom, leaving his wife behind. R. S. 1889, sec. 4908; Griffith v. Bailey, 79 Mo. 472; Steele v. Leonori, 28 Mo. App. 675. It must be borne in mind that the removal of property from the state with the [517]*517intention only to hinder creditors, and not with the intention to change domicile, does not deprive the owner of his exemptions. Onr conclusion is that the court committed error in sustaining the relator’s motion for judgment, and for the error in so doing the judgment will have to be reversed. It may be proper to state -that the defendants’ answer only states inferentially that Pitts, at the date of the attachment, was a resident of the state of Missouri. In this respect the answer ought to be amended.

There is error upon the face of the record for another reason. The statute (R. S. 1879, sec. 3029) authorizes summary proceedings before a justice of the peace against a constable and his securities in the following cases: “First, if the constable fail to make a return of ,the execution according to the command thereof; second, if he make a false return; third, if he fail to have any money by him collected on execution,, before the justice on the return day thereof, ready to be paid over to the persons entitled thereto, or have the receipts of such persons therefor; fourth,

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
49 Mo. App. 511, 1892 Mo. App. LEXIS 255, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-fowler-v-chaney-moctapp-1892.