Wyeth Hardware Co. v. Carthage Hardware Co.
This text of 75 Mo. App. 518 (Wyeth Hardware Co. v. Carthage Hardware Co.) 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
At the trial the interpleader, to maintain the issue, introduced in evidence the mortgage under which he claimed to be entitled to the possession of the property. This instrument recites that the mortgagors-the defendants herein-for the consideration of $1 conveyed to the mortgage-the interpleader-the property therein described, being the same as that attached, “upon condition that we pay the said Firth Charles-worth our two certain promissory notes for the sum of five hundred dollars as follows: One note for three hundred and fifty dollars and one note for two hundred [521]*521dollars with a credit of fifty dollars paid thereon and both notes signed by us and payable to the said Firth Charlesworth then this conveyance shall become null and void, otherwise to remain in full force.” No other reference is made in the mortgage as to the notes. The interpleader further introduced in evidence the sheriff’s return in the writ of attachment and rested. Thereupon the plaintiffs requested the court, by an instruction, to declare that under the law and evidence the verdict should be for the plaintiff. This request the court refused. The plaintiffs declined to offer any evidence whatever and thereupon the court instructed the jury to return a verdict for the interpleader, and the verdict and judgment was accordingly for him and the plaintiffs appealed.
An interplea, as has often been held, is in the nature of a suit in replevin ingrafted on an attachment suit. Hellman v. Pollock, 47 Mo. App. 205, and cases there cited. In an action of replevin for the recovery of the [522]*522possession of specific personal property when the issue raises, as here, the question of title, it devolves on the plaintiff to prove’ that at the time of the caption he had a general or special property in the goods taken and the right to the immediate and exclusive possession. Upham v. Allen, 73 Mo. App. 224; Bank v. Fisher, 55 Mo. App. 51; Gray v. Parker, 38 Mo. 160; 2 Greenleaf’s Ev., sec. 561; Cobbey on Replevin, sec. 423; Mathias v. Sellers, 86 Pa. St. 486; Lanoth v. Wisner, 51 Md. 543. It has been repeatedly ruled in this state where a debt secured by a mortgage is not due at the time of the commencement of the suit that no forfeiture has occurred and that the mortgagee is not entitled to the immediate possession of the mortgaged property. Breger v. Langenberg, 42 Mo. App. 7; Hickman v. Dill, 32 Mo. App. 509; Chandler v. West, 37 Mo. App. 631; State v. Carroll, 24 Mo. App. 361; Bank v. Metcalf, 29 Mo. App. 384; Sheble v. Curdt, 56 Mo. 437.
Personalty which is mortgaged is subject to seizure under process against the mortgagor before the condition is broken and while the right of possession remains in the mortgagor for a definite period. A purchaser at a sale under such process would take the possessory right of the mortgagor subject to the lien of the mortgagee. Springate v. Furniture Co., 51 Mo. App. 1; Hellman v. Pollock, supra; Hickman v. Dill, supra. The interpleader’s mortgage did not prima facie show that at the time of the seizure by the sheriff that he had a general or special property in the goods so seized and the right to the immediate and exclusive possession. It follows that the court erred in the refusal of the plaintiff’s instruction and in the giving of that of interpleader.
[523]*523
As the interpleader’s prima facie case was neither established by the pleadings nor the evidence it results that the judgment must be reversed and the cause remanded.
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75 Mo. App. 518, 1898 Mo. App. LEXIS 464, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wyeth-hardware-co-v-carthage-hardware-co-moctapp-1898.