William Deering & Co. v. Collins

38 Mo. App. 80, 1889 Mo. App. LEXIS 425
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 2, 1889
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 38 Mo. App. 80 (William Deering & Co. v. Collins) 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
William Deering & Co. v. Collins, 38 Mo. App. 80, 1889 Mo. App. LEXIS 425 (Mo. Ct. App. 1889).

Opinion

Smith, P. J. —

This was a suit by the plaintiff, a business corporation, against defendants, by attachment, on an account stated.

The petition alleged that ‘ ‘ plaintiff and defendants had large dealings, in the course of which plaintiff delivered to defendants large quantities of goods, wares and merchandise of great value, to be by defendants held as the property of plaintiff, sold by them on commission for it, and to account for and pay over the receipts therefor to the plaintiff; that defendants sold said goods, wares and merchandise in large quantities of great value, and failed to account for and pay over the moneys received on said sales, and converted the same to their own use. Afterwards, on or about the -day of-, 188 — , plaintiff and defendants had an accounting of all said matters, debts and credits, and, upon said accounting, it was found, agreed and stated that defendants were, at that time, on the account aforesaid, indebted to plaintiff in the sum of thjrteen hundred and four dollars and seventy-five cents, which defendants then and there promised to pay; asked judgment for the sum of money, interest, costs,” etc.

The affidavit on which the attachment was based set forth two distinct and separate causes :

“1. That the defendants have fraudulently conveyed or assigned their property or effects so as to hinder or delay their creditors.-
“ 2. That the damages for which this suit or action is brought are for injuries arising from the commission [84]*84of some felony or misdemeanor.” The defendants put in issue the truth of the facts alleged in the affidavit. At the trial the defendants objected to the introduction of any evidence to sustain the grounds of attachment. The court sustained the objection as to the second ground as to the misdemeanor or felony, and to which ruling the plaintiff duly saved its exceptions.

Neither party has seen fit to set forth the evidence adduced in the cause at the trial, as required by the rules and practice of this court. The abstract contains only a few excerpts from the evidence, and some references thereto; however, this may be all that is necessary to a full understanding of the questions which are presented for’our decision. The reference to the instructions, which is made further along, will be all that is requisite to understand the points of objection to them. As a fesult of the trial, the defendants had judgment from which plaintiff has appealed.

I. The first ground of the plaintiff’s appeal is that the circuit court erred in refusing to permit it to introduce any evidence in support of the second ground of attachment alleged, and, to sustain this objection, contents itself in its brief with the simple remark, “That it would startle the ordinary practitioner if he should' be furnished a precedent or authority for such doctrine, such ruling, such misunderstanding of the plain letter of the law.”

It may not be out of place to suggest here that this remark, just quoted, does not afford us the least assistance in our endeavor to determine whether the adverse ruling of the trial court, of which complaint is made, constitutes reversible error or not. A statement of some principal of law, which may be thought applicable, and which the circuit court infringed by the ruling in question, supported by a citation of authority, would certainly be more apposite.

The action, as has been already stated, was brought on an account stated. It was based upon a promise to [85]*85pay the plaintiff the balance found due to him on the settlement alleged in the petition. The suit is not brought for damages at all. It would then seem quite illogical “that the damages for which the suit is brought are for injuries arising from the commission of some felony or misdemeanor.” If the petition be true, the ground of the attachment is untrue, or vice versa. A more glaring contradiction could not well be presented in the pleadings of any case. The question then is, did the circuit court err in refusing to permit the plaintiff to prove the truth of its second ground of attachment, and thereby disprove and overturn the cause of action it had alleged in its petition. The proof of the one was the disproof of the other.

In Houston v. Woolley, 37 Mo. App. 15, the damages for which the suit was brought were for injuries arising from the commission of a misdemeanor. There was an attachment in aid of the suit, and the affidavit, upon which it was based, set forth but one ground, which was that “the defendant is not a resident of the state of Missouri.”

It was contended that, because the action was for a tort, the attachment ought to abate — we there ruled that the plaintiff might have made the tort alleged in his petition a ground for the attachment, but that there was no rule of practice forbidding him to select any other ground or grounds that existed.

In Bachman v. Lewis, 27 Mo. App. 81, we ruled that the petition did not state a debt of such a nature as would sustain an action at law, and for that reason it would not sustain an attachment. In Finlay v. Bryson, 84 Mo. 664, the plaintiff sued by attachment. The petition was for money had and received for the use of the plaintiff. The affidavit for the attachment alleged as a ground therefor “that the debt sued for was fraudulently contracted on the part of the defendant.” The truth of the affidavit was put in issue by a plea in [86]*86abatement. Mr. Commissioner Martin who delivered the opinion in the case, in discussing the question whether or not the plaintiff was entitled on the pleadings and evidence to judgment, remarked that, “when an attachment is sought upon the grounds contained in the fourteenth subdivision .(R. S., sec. 398), the misconduct of the defendant constituting the ground of the attachment must relate to the same cause of action set forth in the petition. The statute we are construing seems to proceed upon this principle by allowing the plaintiff to sue on the debt, and prosecute an attachment against the debtor’s property for having fraudulently reduced it.”

The second ground of attachment in this case is found in the twelfth subdivision of said section 398, Revised Statutes, and like, the ground in the -fourteenth subdivision already referred to, relates to the cause of action set forth in the petition. It is thus seen that by the very terms of the statute the plaintiff’s second ground of attachment necessarily related to the cause of action stated in the petitio'u. An attachment under the twelfth subdivision is to be distinguished from those based on the first ten subdivisions of the section, in that the latter does not necessarily relate to the cause of action stated in the petition.

Having thus established the direct relation between the cause of action stated in the petition and the ground of attachment under the twelfth subdivision of section 398, it remains to consider further whether the plaintiff can allege and prove a ground of attachment, which contradicts and overthrows the cause of action stated in his petition. It is a rule of pleading that causes of action must be consistent. The requirement of consistency is simply a logical one. Bliss on Code Pleadings, sec. 122. The .same rule is likewise applicable to answers. And. in Nelson v. Brodhac, 44 Mo. 596, it was held that two or more defenses are held to be inconsistent, where the proof .of one necessarily disproves the [87]*87other.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
38 Mo. App. 80, 1889 Mo. App. LEXIS 425, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/william-deering-co-v-collins-moctapp-1889.