54 Mo. App. 420 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1893
— The plaintiff filed the following petition in the circuit court of Carter county:
“W. H. Coggshall, Plaintiff, v. “Orin L. Munger, Defendant.
In the Circuit Court, April Term, 1891
‘ ‘Plaintiff, for cause of action states that on and prior to the sixth day of December, 1890, plaintiff and one L. W. Keen were co-partners in trade and doing business in the county of Carter under the firm name and style of the Keen & Coggshall Lumber Company. That as such co-partnership the plaintiff with the said L. W. Keen became indebted to divers persons in large sums, to-wit, in the sum of $2,000, and that said co-partnership was possessed of the following described personal property, to-wit: A stock of general merchandise at their place of business of what is known
“Plaintiff further states that defendant is the sheriff of Carter county, Missouri, and as such wrongfully took and now wrongfully detains the possession of said property from this plaintiff; that by reason of the wrongful taking and detention of said property he is damaged in the sum of $500. Wherefore by reason of the facts plaintiff prays judgment for the possession of said property and $500 for his damages, and that an elisor be appointed in some suitable person to serve the-process of the court.
“W. H. Coggshall, by L. O. Nieder, his attorney.”
The defendant’s amended answer to the above-petition admitted that he, as sheriff of Carter county,, held, the goods described in plaintiff’s petition under-various writs of attachment which he had levied thereon on December 13, 1890, for the purpose of subjecting the one half interest of L. W. Keen therein to the payment of the amounts for whichx the writs of attachment were issued against him. He
Upon the calling of the case for trial, a jury was selected, the petition read, and a statement made of the substance of defendant’s answer. Thereupon after a witness for plaintiff was sworn the court refused to permit any evidence to be introduced, on the ground that it had no jurisdiction of the matters alleged in the petition in an action at law. The plaintiff duly excepted to this ruling, and has preserved such exception as his assignment of error to this court.
The only question to be solved is whether or not the trial court erred in sustaining the objection made by defendant to the introduction of evidence under the foregoing pleadings. The proposition urged in the defendant’s brief, that a member of a co-partnership after its dissolution by bankruptcy or death has the right by proceeding in equity to compel the appropriation of the partnership assets to the partnership indebtedness, may be safely affirmed as a correct statement of the law. Level v. Farris, 24 Mo. App. 445, 448; 3 Pomeroy’s Equity, sec. 1243.
We fail to see how jurisdiction vested in equity to enforce what is termed a “partner’s lien” for the benefit of firm creditors, or a general accounting before settlement between the partners themselves, could warrant the action of, the trial court in excluding
The answer to the petition justified the seizure by alleging the levy of writs of attachment in the hands of defendant as sheriff and against the retiring partner on his interest in the goods described in the petition, and averred the want of consideration and fraud in tho contract of purchase set forth in the petition. That the sheriff was entitled to levy the writ of attachment in his hands, issued for the private debt of one of the partners, on whatever interest or right the defendant in the writ had in the assets of the firm of which he was member, is expressly decided in Wiles v. Maddox, 26 Mo. 77. That the solvent member of the firm might replevy the attached property, and cause the interest of the defendant in the attachment therein to be ascertained in the replevin suit, and might thereafter pay and satisfy the value of his interest and retain possession of the property is the law of this state. Gillham v. Kerone, 45 Mo. 487; Rapp v. Vogel, 45 Mo. 524; Dilworth v. McKelvy, 30 Mo. 149; Hickman v. Dill, 32 Mo. App. 509, 519.
Under the doctrine of the foregoing cases the appellant might have maintained an action of replevin against the sheriff, as the seizor of the firm assets, under process against one ' of its members for the purpose of having an admeasurement in that action of the value of the interest levied upon.
In support of the action of the court in refusing to permit the plaintiff to introduce any evidence, it is now urged that there was no reply to the defendant’s amended answer. The specific and only objection made to the introduction of evidence was that the issues involved could only be adjudicated by a court of equity. There was not the least intimation that the -objection was based on the failure of the plaintiff to file a reply. Having failed to specifically call the attention of the court to the absence of a reply, the defendant will not be allowed now to profit by the omissions or oversight of the plaintiff’s counsel. Hall v. Water Co., 48 Mo. App. 356; Thompson v. Wooldridge, 102 Mo. 510.
The judgment is reversed, and the cause remanded for trial in conformity herewith.