74 Mo. App. 657 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1898
— Plaintiffs are creditors of Mary E. Sanders and Charles Henrich, as copartners under the firm of Sanders and Henrich, and on the twenty-third of March, 1897, plaintiffs brought an attachment suit for $457.04 and caused the writ to be levied upon certain merchandise as belonging to their said debtors. The property was sold by order of the court. Thereafter B. H. Sanders interpleaded in the cause and alleged that he was the owner of the attached property. Upon issues attacking his title for fraud, the case was tried, and after a verdict in his favor, a judgment “of restitution of the property in controversy” was entered, from which plaintiffs appealed to this court.
As no complaint is made in the motion for new trial of the sufficiency of the evidence to sustain the verdict (Blakely v. Ry, 79 Mo. 388; Mahan v. School District, 29 Mo. App. 269), it need not be set out in extenso. We will assume that there was evidence pro and con on the issues raised by the interplea, and proceed to examine the errors assigned as to the instructions given and as to the reception and rejection of the evidence. The first instruction given for intei’plea,der, over plaintiffs objection, is, to wit:
*660 Instruction. *659 “The court instructs the jury that fraud is never presumed, but must be clearly proven to entitle a party to relief on the ground of fraud, and the presumption of law is that the business transactions of every man are done in good faith and for an honest purpose, and*660 anyone who alleges that such acts are done jn pac[ faith 01’ for a dishonest purpose takes upon himself the burden of showing, by specific acts and circumstances tending to prove fraud, that such acts were done in bad faith.”