48 Mo. App. 590 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1892
This is an appeal by the plaintiffs from an adverse judgment on a plea in abatement in a suit by attachment. The respondent has made a motion to dismiss the appeal, because no appeal bond has been given as required by the governing statute. R. S., sec. 562. We must consider this motion at the outset, because it concerns our own jurisdiction; since if an appeal has not been taken as prescribed by the governing statute, this court has no jurisdiction to proceed to an examination of the merits of the trial on the plea in abatement. The statute is as follows: “The plaintiffs, against whom such issue is found and judgment rendered, may appeal from such judgment, and such appeal shall operate as a supersedeas of such judgment, and shall preserve the attachment in full force until the dismissal or determination of such appeal. If the plaintiff, in case the judgment be against him, fails to appeal from such judgment, or if such appeal be dismissed, or if such judgment against
There is no statutory provision applicable to appeals by the plaintiff from an adverse judgment under a plea in abatement in an attachment suit, allowing bond to be filed in the appellate court, as there is in the case of appeals from judgments from justices (R. S., sec. 6840), or allowing appeals to progress without a supersedeas bond, as in the case of appeals from the circuit court to the supreme court or the appellate-courts. R. S., sec. 2249. On the contrary, this statute, in the very sentence which allows the appeal, prescribes its effect, namely, that it shall “operate as a supersedeas/” and to that end it provides further on that “bond shall be required.” It is argued that the statute contemplates such an appeal, and no other, as shall have the effect of preserving the attachment proceeding in statu quo, until it is determined whether that proceeding has been lawfully taken. In support of this view we are referred to the decision of this court in Green v. Castello, 35 Mo. App. 127, where we held emit
We shall first dispose of the assignment of error, that the plea in abatement does not put in issue the truth of the affidavit, and that the plaintiffs’ motions to strike it out should have prevailed. This assignment is untenable, for the reason that the plea is drawn in the usual form and is a perfectly good traverse.
It appeared in evidence on the trial of the plea in abatement that, on June 5, 1889, the plaintiffs, B. S. Crawford and W. H. Martin, took into partnership with them in the business of carrying on a retail drugstore at Kahoka, .Missouri, the defendant, William II. G-reenleaf. This second partnership continued until the fifteenth of September of the same year 1889. At this last date the plaintiffs sold out their interests to the-defendant, their copartner. He paid them $300 in cash; he gave them his promissory note for $300, payable January 1, 1890 ; he agreed to pay all debts contracted by the firm since its organization on June 1 (sic ), 1889 ; and he assumed and agreed to pay a prior mortgage which had been given by the plaintiffs, Crawford and Martin, on the stock of goods known as “ the Mack mortgage,” amounting, as was recited in the contract, to $1,600, on June 1,' 1889, together with the interest accrued thereon since that date. - At the time of this transaction the “Mack mortgagehad been assigned to, and was owned by, B. P. Greenleaf, the father of the defendant. For these considerations the plaintiffs made an absolute tranfer of the stock in trade to the defendant, and placed him in possession. The Mack mort-gagé
We shall refer to the other evidence only so far as necessary to illustrate the observations, which we shall
These are:
I. That the mortgage, introduced in evidence, known as the Mack mortgage, was and is fraudulent and void as a matter of fact under the evidence. The untenable nature of this assignment of error will appear from two considerations: First, the so-called Mack mortgage was made by the plaintiffs themselves, and not by the defendant; secondly, this assignment of error calls for the decision of a question of fact in an action at law, and this court is not a jury. We cannot reverse a judgment because the triers of the fact, or here the court sitting as a jury, have not found, in an action at law, in favor of the party who sustains the burden of proof on an issue of fraud in fact, except in two cases: “ First. Where there is a conceded or uncontroverted state of facts, with nothing for the jury to pass upon in respect of the credibility of evidence, and where, upon that state of facts, the law draws the inference of fraud as a mere conclusion. Second. Where, as in this case, the question is, what is termed fraud in fact as distinguished from fraud in law, and there is a state of facts, equally conceded, upon which the inference of a fraudulent or dishonest intention is so plain that fair-minded men could not differ concerning the conclusion of the fact to be drawn.” Frankenthal v. Goldstein, 44 Mo. App. 191. It is too plain for argument that the record before us presents no such case.
II. The next proposition advanced in behalf of the plaintiffs is that the defendant assumed the payment of the Mack mortgage as a part of the consideration and purchase price of drugs and stock, and that the plaintiffs thereby became his sureties and, hence, his creditors. This is a correct proposition of law, when properly stated. The plaintiffs were the owners of a stock of goods, on which they had given a mortgage to one
III. From this premise counsel for the plaintiffs deduced their third proposition, which is this: “Even if the Mack mortgage is fraudulent and void as matter of law, plaintiffs being ■ creditors as sureties, and as holding notes for the purchase price, have a right to contend, that, as to them, they having lost all control over the stock of drugs, the defendant acted fraudulently in selling the stock and in not applying the proceeds arising from sales to discharge the indebtedness secured by the Mack mortgage.” ' This again calls for the decision of questions of fact; and any argument in favor of the propositions of fact advanced is weakened when it is considered: First. That the two notes that are the subject of this suit were notes given by the defendant to the plaintiffs, and were not secured by the Mack mortgage, which mortgage was an antecedent mortgage made by the plaintiffs themselves to one Mack. Second. That, prior to the institution of this suit, the Mack mortgage was assigned to B. P. Greenleaf, the defendant’s father; that B. P. Greenleaf testifies that he is now, and was at the time when his son, this defendant, purchased the interest of the plaintiffs in the stock of drugs in controversy, covered by the Mack mortgage, the owner of that mortgage ; that he knew-that his son had sold a half interest in the drugs to Charles Dinsmore for $2,000 at the time, and that his son was paid $2,000, and that none of that money was applied to the payment of the Mack mortgage or intended to be applied thereon; that he knew of the borrowing of the $600 by his son on the stock of drugs, and that none of that was to be applied to the payment
But the evidence showed that the defendant had conveyed a one-half interest in the stock of goods to his brother-in-law, Dinsmore ; that to facilitate this conveyance the defendant’s father, B. P. Greenleaf, as assignee of the Mack mortgage, had released from the lien of that mortgage an undivided one-half interest in the stock of goods. The court, as a trier of the facts, was also bound to consider the nature of the property sold and conveyed by the plaintiffs to the defendant,— that it was a retail stock of goods with which the plaintiffs and the defendant had previously been engaged in trade as partners ; and the natural conclusion would be that they expected the defendant to continue the sale of the goods at retail in the ordinary course of business. The court was also entitled to consider that, by the' terms of this contract of sale, the defendant had assumed the Mack mortgage and had agreed to pay it; but the court was also bound to consider that the instrument recited “this sale to be absolute from and after this date, full possession and control of all said property being this day given to the purchaser.” The court was also entitled to take into consideration the fact, that the contract of sale contains no stipulation
IY. The same observations must be made in respect of the next assignment of error, which relates to the mortgage given by the defendant to his father, B. P. G-reenleaf, to secure the latter in obligations which the latter had undertaken for him as his security. It is argued that this mortgage is fraudulent and void as a matter of fact under the evidence, and should have been so declared by the court. And, in support of this argument, attention is called to the fact that it remained unsatisfied upon the records of the county until a date subsequent to the attachment, although it is alleged to have been satisfied some time before. The most that
Y. The next assignment of error reaches back to the merits of all the preceding ones, and it is this :
“ That for the reasons above stated the plaintiff’s declarations of law should have been given.” These declarations of law all proceeded upon an erroneous theory. They invoke the opinion of the court upon questions of fact, and not upon questions of law. The office of * declarations of law is to discover in what manner the' court applies the law to the facts of the case, where the facts are tried by the judge sitting as a jury. If a party desires special findings of fact, then he should prefer his request for such findings in a proper manner under the statute.
It results that the judgment must be affirmed. It is so ordered.