Webster v. Hardy

163 S.W. 541, 181 Mo. App. 9, 1914 Mo. App. LEXIS 302
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedFebruary 3, 1914
StatusPublished

This text of 163 S.W. 541 (Webster v. Hardy) 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
Webster v. Hardy, 163 S.W. 541, 181 Mo. App. 9, 1914 Mo. App. LEXIS 302 (Mo. Ct. App. 1914).

Opinion

NORTONI, J.

This is a suit in replevin. The finding and judgment were for defendant and plaintiff prosecutes the appeal.

The property in controversy consists of a telephone line, the wire, poles, cross-arms, etc., extending from the Des Moines river bridge to the city of Kahoka, in Clark county. The defendant is sheriff of Clark county and was in possession of the telephone line at the time the suit was instituted under a writ of attachment in his hands issued out of the circuit court of that county, in the suit of Balbach v. Mississippi Valley Telephone Company, a corporation. Defendant sheriff, having levied the writ of attachment upon and taken possession of the telephone line, plaintiff Webster instituted this suit against him in replevin to recover the same, alleging that he, and not the Mississippi Valley Telephone Company, defendant in the [11]*11attachment suit, was the owner of it. It appears that the Mississippi Valley Telephone Company is an Iowa corporation with its principal office at the city of Keokuk. . This company owned and operated several telephone lines in that vicinity and to St. Paul, Minnesota. The plaintiff in the attachment suit, William Balbach, entered the employ of the Mississippi Valley Telephone Company about July 1, 1909, and remained therein until April 1, 1910.

The indebtedness for which Balbach instituted his attachment suit in the Clark County Circuit Court accrued against that company for labor performed in soliciting patrons and collecting for it. During all of the time Balbach worked for the Mississippi Valley Telephone Company, it operated, among others, the telephone line involved here — that is, this short line running from the Des Moines river bridge to Kahoka, in Clark county. All of this line, as we understand it, is in this State. It is to be inferred from the record, though the evidence is meager concerning it, that the property of the Mississippi Valley Telephone Company was encumbered by a mortgage in favor of bond holders and that such mortgage was foreclosed on November 27, 1910. Charles Webtser, plaintiff here, purchased the property of the Mississippi Valley Telephone Company at the mortgage sale, but it is conceded throughout the case that the telephone line from the Des Moines river bridge to Kahoka — that is, the line involved in the replevin — was not included within that mortgage, and that it did not pass by that sale to Webster. However, the evidence is, and no one denies it, that the short line involved in this suit— that is, the line from the Des Moines river bridge to Kahoka, Missouri — was owned by one Thomas Peebles at that time, and that Peebles was the secretary and general manager of the Mississippi Valley Telephone Company.

[12]*12On the same day that plaintiff Webster purchased the property of the Mississippi Valley Telephone Company under the mortgage sale in Iowa, Peebles, the secretary and manager of that company, sold him at private sale the telephone line here involved, running from the Des Moines river bridge to Kahoka, Missouri. That was on November 27,1910. It is not only undisputed, but seems to be conceded, that Webster, plaintiff here, took possession of all of the property of the Mississippi Valley Telephone Company purchased by him at the mortgage sale, and it is in evidence that he took possession, too, of this line in Missouri, which he acquired from Peebles, for his agent, Wood, went over it, examined it, caused some repairs to be made upon it, etc., etc.

There is no evidence whatever in the record that the Mississippi Valley Telephone Company, the Iowa corporation, for which the plaintiff in attachment, William Balbach, had performed services, and which was his debtor therefor, ever at any time owned the telephone line in Missouri, running from the Des Moines river bridge to Kahoka — that is, the line involved in this suit in replevin — unless the ownership of Peebles, secretary and manager of that company, inured in some way to the benefit of the telephone company, so as to enable the company’s creditor, Balbach, to seize and appropriate it. in compensation of his debt against the corporation. It is- undisputed and, indeed, conceded, for both sides gave it in evidence, that one Hubinger originally constructed the telephone line involved in this suit, from the Des Moines river bridge to the city of Kahoka, and owned it in October, 1905, or three and one-half years before Balbach entered the employ of the Mississippi Valley Telephone Company. On October 26,1905, Hubinger sold the line to Thomas Peebles and executed a bill of sale therefor. It appears that several suits were pending between Hubinger, Peebles and others, and upon a compromise of [13]*13that litigation, Hubinger transferred the telephone line to Peebles, and Peebles thereafter operated it, so he says, in connection with the Mississippi Valley Telephone Company, of which he was-secretary and manager. According to the evidence of Peebles, and though it may not be admitted to be true, it is not disputed in the record, the Mississippi Valley Telephone Company, of which he was manager, sent toll messages over this particular telephone line, and he received seventy-five per cent of the tolls while the company took twenty-five per cent. Peebles at that time — that is, in October, 1905, when he acquired this telephone line from Hubinger — was secretary and manager of the Mississippi Valley Telephone Company, and it appears that this line was thereafter operated in conjunction therewith, without any ostensible insignia of separate ownership. '

The evidence for defendant tends to prove that the ■ Mississippi Valley Telephone Company operated the particular telephone line-involved here between the Des Moines river bridge and Kahoka, Missouri, in connection with its other lines — that is, all were under the same management of Mr. Peebles and others who were connected with the Iowa corporation, as if all belonged to that company. It is said that any repairing which was done on the telephone line between the Des Moines river bridge and Kahoka was done by the employees of the Mississippi Valley Telephone Company. Materials for repairs were furnished by that company, and, indeed, William Balbach, plaintiff in the attachment suit, himself solicited some patrons for telephones and made some collections for that company on this identical telephone line. ' The receipts in the offices were reported to the Mississippi Valley Telephone Company’s office at Keokuk, Iowa, and to the world at large it appeared as though the Mississippi Valley Telephone Company was operating this fine in Missouri, and it may be that it appeared to be operat[14]*14ing it as the owner. Bnt though such he true, the evidence is, and no one contradicts it, that Mr. Peebles, manager of the Mississippi Valley Telephone Company, personally owned this short line and operated it individually in connection with the lines of which he was manager, 'and it is said by him that, for such materials and repairs as were put upon the line, payment was made by him through deposits in the bank at Keokuk to the credit of the Mississippi Valley Telephone-Company, of which he was secretary and manager.

But after all, the case concedes that Hubinger owned this telephone line in 1905, having constructed it several years before and operated it for a time, and that he sold it to Thomas Peebles in October of that year.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
163 S.W. 541, 181 Mo. App. 9, 1914 Mo. App. LEXIS 302, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/webster-v-hardy-moctapp-1914.