40 Mo. 523 | Mo. | 1867
delivered the opinion of the court.
Stephen M. Edgell sued the firm of Smith & Bullens by attachment, and Buckland was summoned as garnishee. In his answer.to interrogatories filed, Buckland admitted that he had in his hands the sum of $2,102.21^ which he owed Smith & Bullens for the purchase of wheat, on the day of the service of the garnishment, but stated that before he received notice of the garnishment the debt was assigned and transferred to Chas. L. Tucker, and that therefore he owed Smith & Bullens nothing. The facts shown upon the trial are, briefly, as follows:
On the 13th day of December, 1864, Buckland and Smith, of the firm of Smith & Bullens, met upon the street in the city of St. Louis, and Smith requested of Buckland a check for the balance for which he was indebted to the firm. The parties not recollecting the precise amount of the indebted
It is insisted here for the appellant, that the declarations of law given by the court are erroneous and inconsistent with themselves, and that, for this reason, the judgment should be reversed. ' But the only question is the true interpretation of the agreement entered into between Smith, Buckland and Tucker, and if this is arrived at, it is decisive of the case, and the instructions need not be noticed. There is no dispute about facts, and the controversy is exclusively one of law. It is strongly urged that when Smith requested Buckland to pay the debt to Tucker, and Buckland assented thereto, although he coupled the assent with the condition
The agreement between Smith, Buckland and Tucker was complete, only conditioned that if, when Buckland went to his office, he should find legal process there which would hold the money, he should not be required to pay. It is fair to
When the agreement or contract was made between the parties, no lien had attached on the money in the hands of
The judgment must be reversed and the cause remanded.