Union Motor Car Co. v. Farmer

118 So. 425, 151 Miss. 734, 1928 Miss. LEXIS 339
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 8, 1928
DocketNo. 27090.
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 118 So. 425 (Union Motor Car Co. v. Farmer) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Union Motor Car Co. v. Farmer, 118 So. 425, 151 Miss. 734, 1928 Miss. LEXIS 339 (Mich. 1928).

Opinion

*741 Ethridge, P. J.

This action was brought by the appellant as plaintiff in the court below, based upon a promissory note executed by the appellee, H. H. Farmer, for the balance of the purchase money of one Mercer car, or automobile, of the sport model pattern, No. 4296, purchased from the appellant. The action was instituted upon a writ of seizure based, upon a proper affidavit for the condemnation and sale of the automobile to satisfy the purchase-money lien. The declaration was *742 filed March 34, 1920, and the writ of summons and seizure was issued to the sheriff of the county on April 6, 1920. The sheriff' seized the automobile, making a return on the same day that he had taken'the automobile in his possession and placed it in the garage named in his return. After the automobile had been seized, Farmer, through his attorney, sued out a writ of replevin against the Imperial Garage and the sheriff, the car having been placed by the sheriff in this garage for safe-keeping. In the suit against the garage and the sheriff, Farmer tendered to the sheriff a bond signed by himself and two sureties conditioned for the forthcoming of the car in the replevin suit, and the car was taken, disposed of, and removed out of the jurisdiction of the court by the appellee. Thereafter the plaintiff in the original suit, Union Motor Car Company, proceeded with the trial in the circuit court and introduced a note signed by Farmer as being the purchase money due on such car, in which the car was described and the amount due named, and which provided for attorney fe (fees. Thereupon the plaintiff rested its case, and the defendant appears to have¡ done likewise. Then a peremptory instruction was granted by the court to find for the plaintiff in the amount of the note, and said instruction was filed in the papers in said case, and the trial judge noted a- jury and verdict for the plaintiff for such amount upon his docket. But the jury does not appear to have actually retired or to have returned a verdict into court. Thereafter motion was' made for a new trial, and said motion was taken under advisement by the trial judge for decision in vacation. The motion was kept by the trial judge undisposed of until a regular term of court .had intervened and adjourned; and on a day after the final adjournment of the circuit court, the judge entered a judgment in vacation which was entered upon the minutes of the court. Subsequently an execution was issued upon this judgment and turned over to the sheriff; *743 and a motion was made against the sheriff for failure to execute and return such execution. An appeal to this court was prosecuted from the judgment rendered on this motion against the sheriff, and on its hearing it was held that the trial judge had no power to render the judgment in vacation after the intervention of the term of court between the taking of the cause under advisement and the rendition of the judgment thereon. Union Motor Car Co. v. Cartledge, 133 Miss. 318, 97 So. 801.

After the mandate was returned to the court below, the plaintiff in the original suit served notice upon the defendant, the appellee here, that he would ask for an original proceeding before a jury, and undertake to prove all the issues of the case as an original trial, ignoring the former proceeding, and a copy of this notice was sent to the circuit court. When the next term of court convened, the plaintiff, the Union Motor Car Company, presented its contention, by motion, to set aside the other proceeding, and to start anew with the trial. The judge of the circuit court held that inasmuch as the first judgment, in which the motion for a new trial was overruled, was void, the motion for a new trial was still pending and was the only thing before the circuit court, and that he would first consider whether the motion for a new trial should be sustained or denied. He offered to permit the plaintiff to introduce proof upon the motion for a new trial, which offer the plaintiff declined and stood upon his rights to proceed with the trial anew as an independent trial. The motion for a new trial was thereupon overruled by the court, and a judgment was entered upon the verdict directed to be returned at the former term of the court.

The defendant, IT. H. Farmer, introduced the papers and proceedings, including the instruction directing the jury to return a verdict for the plaintiff, and the docket *744 entries of the judge of the cirouit court showing a jury and verdict for the plaintiff in the amount sued for.

It appears that in the former suit prior to the judgment the sheriff was permitted to amend his original return by showing the acceptance of the bond, as above stated; and the circuit judge on the present proceeding-held that such bond was, in legal effect, a bond in the original proceeding and inured to the benefit of the plaintiff, the Union Motor Car Company, and offered the plaintiff the opportunity of taking proof of the value of the_ automobile so bonded and to proceed upon the bond given against Farmer and his sureties thereon. It appears further from the records introduced, among which is the record on the former hearing in this court, that the sureties had, at the time of the trial, become insolvent, apd that the said bond had no real value at the time the judgment was entered. The judgment recites that this offer was declined, and, there being nothing to predicate a judgment for the value of the car so bonded, that a judgment should be entered against the defendant, IT. H. Farmer, and Will Counts and R. C. Terry, sureties on the said bond of defendant; that, the court being- unable to determine the form and substance af the judgment which- should be entered against said defendant and sureties on the replevin bond, because of the fact that the value of the automobile had not been determined, and that no judgment could be rendered in the said cause on the said verdict, the court determined a writ of inquiry should issue for the determination of the value of the automobile; that the plaintiff, in open court, declined to accede to the issuance of the said writ of inquiry, and declined to avail himself thereof; that thereupon the court determined and ordered that the plaintiff do have and recover of the defendant, H. H. Farmer, the sum of three thousand seventy-three dollars and twelve cents, with interest at the rate of six per cent, per annum from and after May 21, 1921, together *745 with the costs accrued aud to he taxed, for all of which let execution issue, to which judgment the plaintiff excepted.

We think that the judgment in vacation on the motion for a new trial being void, as held in a former decision of this court, it remains a pending motion; and it is proper and competent for the judge to determine from the instruction given directing the jury to return a verdict for the plaintiff for a given amount, and from the entries on his docket, the fact that such verdict existed. In section 772, Hemingway’s 1927 Code (section 1016, Code 1906), it is provided:

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
118 So. 425, 151 Miss. 734, 1928 Miss. LEXIS 339, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/union-motor-car-co-v-farmer-miss-1928.