153 Mo. App. 214 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1910
This is an action in replevin, originally brought by plaintiff before a justice of the peace in the city of St. Louis, to recover certain property claimed by him, the property then being in the hands of the defendant Slater, .under an execution issued against defendant William E. Guthrel, on a judgment against him in favor of one Cohen. On appeal to the circuit court and a trial there before the court and a jury;'it appeared that the plaintiff held a chattel mortgage securing a note, the note being signed and chattel mortgage executed and properly acknowledged by William G. Guthrel, and duly recorded. It appears that the action by Cohen against William E. Guthrel was by attachment but that the constable was in possession of the property under general execution. The only testimony in the case, beyond the chattel mortgage and agreement of facts as to the aforesaid judgment, execution, levy and possession of the property by Slater as constable at the time it was replevied in this action, was that of the plaintiff John Guthrel. His testimony appeal’s to be conflicting and not very consistent in itself, but we gather from it that he was a manufacturer’s agent, selling furniture by sample; that he had samples of the goods that he was selling in a store of his own and apparently had some other furniture in the store outside of the samples; that the mode of conducting the business was to show the samples to prospective customers and if they purchased, plaintiff sent in the order to the manufacturer and the goods were furnished from the latter establishment, the samples always remaining in John Guthrel’s possession unsold. He
The court, in its instructions to the jury, among other things, told the' jury that plaintiff had a right to recover possession of the property referred to in the chattel mortgage, unless they found “that some personal property situated in the store No. 2251 S. Grand avenue, in possession of Wm: E. Guthrel at the date of said mortgage was agreed to be excluded from the terms of said mortgage, as in other instructions defined.” In another instruction the court told the jury, among other things, that though they might find that the property in controversy was at the time of the issuance of the writ of replevin in the. case in the possession of the defendant Slater in his official capacity as constable under legal process, if they further found and believed from the evidence that the defendant constable held the property under and by virtue of an execution in aid of a general judgment against William E. Guthrel, that this fact alone would constitute no legal bar to the recovery of plaintiff in this case as against the said Prank M. Slater, “unless you further find from the evidence in this case that there was personal property in the store at No. 2251 South Grand avenue, St. Louis, on March 9, 1908, belonging to William E. Guthrel, which it was agreed between himself and plaintiff, John Guthrel, at the time of executing said mortgage, or
The contention of the learned counsel for the appellant is directed to the refusal of the instruction for a finding in favor of the defendant Slater. While it is true that the evidence of plaintiff was conflicting with itself, the question of there being any secret agreement or arrangement between John and William E. Guthrel, by which the latter was allowed to sell part of the mortgaged property without accounting to the mortgagee for the proceeds was submitted to the jury by the instructions asked and given at the instance both of the plaintiff and of the defendant Slater, so that the court and jury had this witness before them, and it was for the jury to determine what version of the transaction given by plaintiff was correct. They were the sole judges on that point. It is also to be said with reference to this that most of the apparent conflict in the testimony of John Guthrel appears to have arisen over the testimony he gave at the trial and that which he appears to have given when his deposition was taken. At what time the latter occurred does not appear, as the deposition’ was not offered nor introduced as a whole. Reading over the abstract as prepared by the learned and careful counsel for the appellant, we are rather inclined to think that the conflict resulted more from misunderstanding of each other by counsel and witness than from contradictory testimony by the latter. At all events the jury are the ones to pass on this conflict and their attention was distinctly called to the importance and necessity of finding that there was or was not exclusion of any goods, or any secret agreement, outside of the mortgage, as to the sale, and of the effect