75 Mo. App. 143 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1898
At this juncture the interpleader, who was postmaster, with his office in the defendants’ store, proposed to the latter to buy them out, which proposition was accepted by them; and thereupon the defendants executed to interpleader a' bill of sale for their entire stock. The consideration recited in this instrument was $4,550.20. A few days after the interpleader took possession of the stock of goods so purchased of defendants, the plaintiffs brought this action, causing a part of said stock to be seized under the writ therein issued. The ground of the attachment was that defendants had fraudulently disposed of their property so as to hinder and delay their creditors.
Stover Simcox filed an interplea in the attachment suit alleging that the attached property belonged to him and that the same was in his actual and exclusive possession when taken by the sheriff, and that defendants nor neither of them then had any right, title or interest therein. The plaintiffs filed an answer to the interplea denying generally the allegations thereof, and also alleging specific acts of fraud. There was a trial on the issues made by the interplea and answer thereto, by the court without the aid of a jury which resulted in a finding and judgment for interpleader. Plaintiffs appealed.
It appears from the testimony of thp interpleader, who was called as witness for plaintiffs, that the agreed price of the store was $4,500, and that in payment thereof he gave the defendants back their notes amounting to $3,349.33, and assumed the payment of certain debts of the defendants aggregating $1,200.38.
In answer to a question whether or not, at the trial of a certain case, he had not testified that the said $1,100 note was given to his son Prank as part of the consideration for the transfer of the stock of goods from defendants, he answered that he did not so testify. The plaintiffs read, without objection, from the notes of the evidence taken by the official stenographer of the court wherein the case referred to was tried, by which it appeared that the interpleader then testified that as a part of the consideration for the purchase of the goods he gave his son Prank his • negotiable promissory note for $1,100, due two years after date. The interpleader was then recalled by his counsel and asked this question, viz: “Now, Mr. Simeox, I noticed when the stenographer read the evidence there was some evident breaks in the record. There is no explanation of how you came to give your note for your son’s wife. The explanation you gave on this trial is the correct explanation?” And to which he answered: “No, sir.” By this answer we understand the inter-pleader in effect as having said that it was untrue as testified by him in his examination in chief that the note was no part of the consideration for the transfer of the goods, but that the testimony given by him in another case, as read from the notes of the court stenographer, which was, in substance, that the note was part of the consideration for the transfer, and so forth, was true. The interpleader and his son both testified that since a former trial of this case the note had been destroyed by their wives. The uncontradicted
After an examination of the entire evidence we are unable to resist the conclusion that the $1,100 note was given as a part of the consideration for the transfer of the goods. The reasonable and fair inference to be drawn from the various facts disclosed by the evidence is that the parties to the transaction of the sale and purchase of the goods had a notion that Frank Simcox, the son of interpleader, ought to have returned to him out of the partnership assets the $1,000 that he had previously paid the interpleader on account of the purchase of the one third interest in the store, and that accordingly the giving of the note was made to enter into the consideration for the transfer.
The interpleader’s instructions would, we think, be well enough if. the qualification contained in the plaintiffs’ sixth, already hereinbefore quoted, was added thereto by way of a proviso. Under the evidence wre think the plaintiffs were entitled to a consideration of the case .by the court on the theory of their refused instruction. We should reverse the present judgment and direct a judgment for plaintiffs were it not that we are not entirely satisfied with the interpretation placed by us on the interpleader’s answer to the question propounded to him by his counsel heretofore referred to. The interpleader may not have fully comprehended the scope and meaning of the question put to him by his counsel owing to its very involved nature. It may have been, too, that a bewildered condition of his mind occasioned by the circumstances of his recall to the witness stand may have been a contributing cause to his inability to understand the question he was requested to answer. As we have doubts as to whether he fully understood the question and whether, if he had, he would have answered it as he did, we shall reverse the judgment and remand the cause to the end that there may be another trial when he may have an opportunity to again testify in the case.