Strauss v. Ayers

34 Mo. App. 248, 1889 Mo. App. LEXIS 76
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedFebruary 19, 1889
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 34 Mo. App. 248 (Strauss v. Ayers) 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
Strauss v. Ayers, 34 Mo. App. 248, 1889 Mo. App. LEXIS 76 (Mo. Ct. App. 1889).

Opinion

Rombauer, P. J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

The plaintiff instituted suit by attachment, against the defendant, May 27, 1881, for the recovery of a debt of $281.98, and on the same day caused A. S. Kinney to be summoned on the attachment writ as garnishee. Subsequently, and prior to the trial herein, the plaintiff recovered judgment for the amount claimed against the defendant Ayers.

[251]*251Interrogatories were filed to be answered by the garnishee, and he answered, denying all indebtedness. The plaintiff filed a denial which stated among other things, “that at the time of the service of the garnishment, the garnishee had in his possession or under his control the sum of four hundred and ninety-four dollars in money, the property of the defendant John Ayers.”

The denial was not replied to, but the cause was tried as if the issues had been properly framed under the provisions of section 2533, Revised Statutes, and no point was, or is, made by either party touching the omission of a reply, hence we will treat the case, as if one had been filed. The trial resulted in a judgment of two hundred and five dollars against the garnishee, from which he prosecutes this appeal.

The following facts appeared in evidence. Two attachment suits were prosecuted against the defendant Ayers at the same time. One by Horine for the recovery of ninety-five dollars, and plaintiff’s suit above mentioned, and Kinney was summoned as garnishee in both actions. He was summoned as garnishee in the Horine suit, on the same day as in plaintiff’s, but at a prior hour. The Horine garnishment was tried in June, 1881, and resulted in a judgment against the garnishee for ninety-five dollars, which amount he paid. There was evidence tending to show the insolvency of the defendant Ayers at the date of these garnishments.

Upon the trial of this case, Horine testified that upon the trial of his garnishment suit against Kinney, the latter admitted that he had about five hundred dollars of the money of Ayers’ in his hands, and claimed that three hundred dollars of the amount was handed to him by Ayers as a gift.' To rebut this evidence, the garnishee in his own behalf testified as follows :

“On May 27, 1881, Ayers gave me three hundred dollars. He was under indictment in the circuit court and I was on his bond. I told him I would not take the money unless he would let me do as I pleased with [252]*252it, and on condition that he would let me use it as I thought best for him in settling his indictments and in paying his debts. The next day he paid me one hundred and eighty dollars or one hundred and ninety dollars to pay his debts with. This made in all four hundred and eighty dollars or four hundred and ninety dollars he paid me. I did not have enough money including all he gave me, to pay his debts. I applied every cent I got from him to the payment of his debts. Ayers told me to use his money as I thought proper for him. The next day after the garnishment, Mr. Heffernan came to me with Mr. Lang, and I then agreed to pay Lang one hundred dollars which I afterwards did. I paid out more than five hundred dollars of his debts. I received all the money before the garnishment, except the three hundred dollars which I received the day of the garnishment. I paid out twenty dollars more than he gave me and it was all paid out before I was garnished. I applied every cent of it to • the payment of his debts. He told me to use the money for him as I thought proper.

On cross-examination, witness was asked the following questions : “In June, 1881, during the trial of S. H. Horine against John Ayers, defendant, and A. F. Kinney, garnishee, before McPherson, justice of the peace, while on the witness stand in your own defense, did you not swear that at the time of the service of the garnishment you had in your possession $492.75, but before the day of trial you had paid out $192.75 on debts of John Ayers ? ”

“I probably swore I had received $492.75 from Ayers ?”

“Hid you not swear that you paid thirty-nine dollars to sheriff Patterson for costs, forty-two dollars to Hr. McPherson for a fine, eleven dollars and twenty-five cents to Kerchner Bros, for ice, one hundred dollars to Lang for Ruddle, and the three hundred dollars was a gift 3 ”

[253]*253“Yes.”

“What was the understanding between you and Ayers when you received this money, in regard to what you was to do with it ? ”

“ I was to use my own discretion in paying his debts.”

Here attorney for plaintiffs read the following, purporting to be part of the testimony of Kinney before McPherson in June, 1881.

“ I am acquainted with John Ayers and know when he sold his saloon to Ruddle Bros. I know that Horine sued out an attachment against him. I know that he was indebted. Ayers put $192.75 in my hands to pay a part of his debts. I paid thirty-nine dollars to McPherson in satisfaction of a fine and costs when he pleaded guilty to some misdemeanor. I paid forty-two dollars in the circuit court when he pleaded guilty to selling liquor on Sunday. One hundred dollars I paid to Ruddle Bros, and Lang in satisfaction of some bills ; it did not pay Lang in full. I paid $11.75 to Kerchner for ice. He gave me three hundred dollars as a present, or to help him out of a difficulty. I considered it as a present. I told him I would not take it any other way. It is my money, not his. I have not any money belonging to Ayers. It is mine. I never intended, nor do I now ever intend to give any of the money back to him. ” And asked the witness whether he had not so testified before the justice.

Kinney answered: “The only difference between your statement and my statement before McPherson is that I always told him I was to have the money to use as I pleased in fixing up his debts.”

The complaints made on this appeal are, that the court permitted plaintiff to give illegal evidence, and misdirected the jury as to the law.

■Touching first complaint it will suffice to say, that every one of the objections of the garnishee to the introduction of evidence, is a general objection, specifying [254]*254no grounds of objection whatever, hence, under the rule governing appellate procedure in this state, the propriety of the action of the court on that head is not subject to review on appeal.

The garnishee asked the court to instruct the jury in substance, that if the money was received by the garnishee as a gift or in trust for the use of Ayers, or for the purpose of being paid to the creditors of Ayers, or to hold Kinney harmless as security for Ayers, then the garnishee was not liable. These instructions the court refused.

The court gave at the garnishee’s instance, two instructions. One declared that if the garnishee had no money, goods or effects of the defendant in his hands at the date of the garnishment, they will find the issues for the garnishee. The other declared that even though the jury found that Kinney had received money from Ayers, still if they further found that he had paid it all out before he was summoned as garnishee in this case, they should find a verdict for him.

Upon plaintiff’s request, the court instructed the jury in substance : (1) That if they found that Kinney was indebted to Ayers at the date of the garnishment, he was liable for the amount of such indebtedness, less the sum of ninety-five dollars paid on the Horine judgment.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
34 Mo. App. 248, 1889 Mo. App. LEXIS 76, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/strauss-v-ayers-moctapp-1889.