63 Mo. 90 | Mo. | 1876
delivered the opinion of the court.
This was an action brought in the Daviess Circuit Court under the statute, in relation to the claim and delivery of personal property, for the recovery of a saw and grist mill, alleged to belong to the estate of Wm. R. Hobbs; of which plaintiff was administrator. Both parties concede it to be personal property, and there is nothing in the record to show the contrary. An order of delivery was made and executed, notwithstanding that the affidavit failed to state that said property had not been seized under any process, execution or attachment against the property of said Hobbs.
It appears that in November, 1868, the sheriff of Daviess county levied on the mill in controversy, as the property of Hobbs, under an execution against him in favor of one Triggle, and sold the same at the court house door, in said county, to one Thomas J. Brown. The sheriff did not have the property present at the sale, and -there is no evidence that he ever delivered it into the possession of Brown. Secondary evidence of the execution, levy and sale was admitted without objection. The manner in which the levy was made does not appear, but in the absence of all testimony on that point, we must presume it to have been legally made. Hobbs, it seems, in some unexplained way regained possession of the mill, but whether before or after the sale, is not shown. He refused to permit Brown to take the property, and kept possession thereof until his death, in 1869. Some time before Hobbs died, Brown brought suit to recover the mill; but in December, 1871, before the determination of the suit, he sold it to the defendant, Stephens, who soon thereafter peaceably took possession thereof, removed and established it in another locality, and expended in the improvement and repair of the same, between five and six hundred dollars. After Stephens took possession, Brown dismissed his suit. Cook claimed under Stephens. Certain voluntary proceedings in bankruptcy, by Hobbs, are referred
The cause was tried by the court without the aid of a jury ; and as the facts stated are undisputed, it will not be necessary to refer to the instructions further than to say, ’that the plaintiffs’ instructions announce abstract propositions of law, merely. They do not undertake to apply the law to the facts.
The defendant denies the jurisdiction of ithe circuit court, because the affidavit was defective. The defect in the affidavit cannot affect the judgment. It is true, the mill was delivered to the plaintiff in this case prematurely, and it might have been ordered back into the possession of the defendant; but an action may be brought and maintained in the circuit court for the recovery of specific personal property, under our statute, without any affidavit. In such case, of course, the plaintiff will not be entitled to have the property delivered to him, until judgment has been rendered in his favor.
The only point made by the plaintiff, in support of the judgment, which we need notice, is, that the property was not present at the sale, and that Brown therefore acquired no right thereto by his purchase. In some of the States it has been held, that a sale of personal property under execution, which is not present so that it may be inspected by the bidders and delivered by the officer to the purchaser, is absolutely void.
In the case of Kean vs. Newell (1 Mo. 754), it was held, that by the levy of the execution, the sheriff acquired a legal title to the chattel seized, and his sale passed the title to a bona fide purchaser, though the property was not present; but that in case of fraud or gross misconduct of the sheriff, the court would set the sale aside. In that case, Judge McGirk expressed the opinion that the property should be present when sold, unless in cases where, from the nature of the thing, it could not be so present.
In the case of Newman vs. Hook (37 Mo. 207), the precise point, now under consideration, was not directly passed upon. There, the sheriff failed to make any levy ; there was no actual
Many excellent reasons may he given why, ordinarily, the property should he present when the sale takes place; but we do not think it would be wise to declare that a sale of personal property, after a valid levy thereon, will, in all cases, even though acquiesced in by the parties, be absolutely void, unless the property be present at the place of sale. Cases may be imagined where such a rule would not only be without benefit, but would be productive of inconvenience and positive detriment to the parties interested; and w.e think it a much better rule to declare such sales to be voidable only by the debtor in the execution, for cause shown to the court, in a motion to set aside the sale for that reason.
On the facts as shown by the present record, we hold that the sheriff’s sale passed the title to the mill to Brown, and the judgment will therefore be reversed, and the cause remanded.