Sutton v. Stevens
This text of 41 Mo. App. 42 (Sutton v. Stevens) 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
This is a contest for priority of lien, between attaching creditors. The plaintiffs filed their petition in the circuit court of Reynolds county, [45]*45in which they stated, in substance, that they are securities on the defendant’s official bond, as. the collector of revenue for said county, and that defendant has misused and embezzled public moneys coming to his hands, as such collector, and owes the state six thousand dollars, for which amount the plaintiffs, as his securities, are responsible to the state. This petition was verified by the affidavit of one of the plaintiffs, stating that they had a just demand against the defendant, as securities on his official bond, which was now due, and that affiant had good reason to believe, and did believe, that the defendant was making improper use of the funds belonging to the state of Missouri, collected by him, as collector of the revenue of Reynolds county. The affidavit was sworn to before one of the plaintiff’s attorneys, who was a notary.
The plaintiffs thereupon gave bond in the form usual in attachment cases, the clerk of the circuit court of Reynolds county, who approved the bond, being one of their sureties on said bond. Upon these papers a writ of attachment was issued on March 21, 1889, and levied on the same day on certain personalty of .the défendant, which the sheriff subsequently sold under this writ, and the writ issued in favor of appellants, hereinafter mentioned, realizing the sum of three thousand and eight dollars upon such sale. The appellants, who were then residents of the city of St. Louis, brought an attachment suit in due form against the defendant in the-circuit court of the city of St. Louis, on April 1, 1889, and caused the defendant to be served with summons in the city of St. Louis, where he was found, although he was at the time a resident of Reynolds county, and had no attachable property, in St. Louis. They then caused a writ of attachment to be issued in said suit to the sheriff of Reynolds county, who levied it on the same property which had been attached by him on plaintiffs’ writ.
[46]*46No property was ever attached in the city of St. Louis. At the return term of the writ of summons, issued in behalf of the appellants, they appeared in the circuit court of the city of St. Louis, and obtained a judgment by default sustaining their attachment.' They then moved the circuit court of the city of St. Louis to transfer the cause to the circuit court of Reynolds county, under the provisions of section 447, Revised Statutes of 1879, in. reference to proceedings where the same property has been attached by writs from different courts. This motion was sustained and the cause transferred to Reynolds county. They subsequently obtained an order from the circuit court of Reynolds county to be permitted to file their transcript from the city of St. Louis in that court.
In the meantinje, the defendant in the' attachment filed his motion to quash the writ of attachment issued in the first suit on the ground that it had been improvidently issued. The circuit court óf Reynolds county overruled this motion and gave the plaintiffs in the original suit leave to file an amended petition, affidavit and bond. The appellants objected to the filing of thes'e amended papers, and, their objection being overruled, saved their exceptions. The defendant in the attachment thereupon prayed for a change of venue in the suit of these plaintiffs, which the court sustained, changing the venue to Wayne county, but no order transferring the action of the appellants against the defendant was ever made, and that action, as Jar as the record shows, is still in Reynolds county. All the parties appeared in Wayne county. The appellants filed a motion to postpone the plaintiffs’ attachment to theirs, which the court overruled and they saved their exception. The plaintiffs and the defendant in the attachment went to trial in their cause, and the plaintiffs’ attachment was sustained. The appellants thereupon renewed their motion to postpone the plaintiffs’ [47]*47attachment to theirs, and, such motion being again overruled, they filed their bill of exceptions in the Wayne county circuit court, by which the facts hereinabove stated appear, and appealed to this court. No final judgment against the defendant was ever rendered in any court, either in the suit of the plaintiffs or in that of the appellants.
We have thus recited the facts shown by this extraordinary record in full, because we are at a loss to understand on what theory this appeal has been brought to this court. It comes from Wayne county without any showing that the appellants were ever properly before that court. Section 447, supra, provides that controversies of this character “shall be determined by that court out of which the first writ of attachment was issued; in order whereto, the cases originating in the other court shall be transferred to it, and shall thenceforth be there heard, tried and determined in all their parts, as if they had been instituted therein.” That section does not contemplate that part of a case shall be determined in one court and part in another. Notwithstanding the transfer, the two cases, that of plaintiffs and that of appellants, were independent records, and were in no sense consolidated. The mere transfer of plaintiffs’ action from Reynolds to Wayne county did not have the effect of transferring appellants’ action likewise, and unless appellants’ action was in the Wayne county court, they had no standing whatever in that court, and all the proceedings of that court, as far as they are concerned, are cor am nonjudice.
There is another proposition which is equally fatal to the appeal. The record fails to show that the appellants ever obtained any final judgment in their cause. Appeals in this state lie from final judgments only. Before the change made in the attachment law by section 439, Revised Statutes, 1879, which provides for appeals from judgments on plea in abatements, it had [48]*48been repeatedly decided that no appeal could be prosecuted from such a judgment. Davis v. Perry, 46 Mo. 449; Jones v. Snodgrass, 54 Mo. 597; Walser v. Haley, 61 Mo. 445. In this case the defendant in the attachment appeared personally, so that the provisions of section 453 of the Revised Statutes of 1879 do not apply, even if the appeal could by any possibility be construed as one taken by the appellants from the judgment against the defendant in the suit of the plaintiffs. As we held in State ex rel. v. Finn, 23 Mo. App. 293 (such holding being approved by the supreme court in State ex rel. v. Finn, 98 Mo. 541), “the interest of parties to an attachment suit is contingent upon the termination of the controversy.” How could the appellants claim that they were aggrieved by the action of the court in refusing to postpone the plaintiff’s attachment to theirs without showing by final judgment against the defendant that they had a valid claim against him? In Gilbert v. Gilbert, 33 Mo. App. 259, both parties had prosecuted their claim to final judgment, before the appellants sought to test their right of priority by appeal.
It results from the foregoing considerations that the only disposition that can be made now of this proceeding is to dismiss the appeal.
Appeal dismissed.
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41 Mo. App. 42, 1890 Mo. App. LEXIS 250, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sutton-v-stevens-moctapp-1890.