63 Mo. App. 40 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1895
This action is replevin, in which plaintiff recovered judgment. It appears a firm of Moody & Eurit, desiring to enter into business, procured plaintiff “to stand good” for them, in the purchase of goods to the amount of $1,000. That in order to secure plaintiff against his liability for them, they
The defendants are a- constable and deputy constable, who each, on June 8, 1893, levied an execution on the goods in plaintiff’s possession, on judgments which other creditors had obtained against Moody & Eurit.
We can not discover a reason why the judgment of the lower court should be disturbed. Indeed it seems to us that under the undisputed and conceded facts, the court might have instructed peremptorily for the plaintiff. Whatever legal frailty there was in the mortgage, was cured by the plaintiff’s having taken actual possession before the levy by defendants. Dobyns v. Meyer, 95 Mo. 132. It matters not that plaintiff may not have been the absolute owner of the goods at the time of the levy by defendants. He was in possession, holding the goods as security for admitted liabilities of
Defendants asked and were refused an instruction submitting to the jury the hypothesis of plaintiff hav- > ing designed to cheat the creditors of Moody & Eurit by his original agreement with them, and that in pursuance of such design, he took possession of the goods. There was not a particle of evidence to base this upon and it was properly refused. There was no evidence oh sufficient substance, to submit to the jury the question of fraud in fact. If plaintiff had not taken actual possession of the property, before the levy, and had stood on the mortgage, circumstanced as it was, disconnected from an actual possession, a question of fraud in law would have presented itself. But, as the case stands on the record presented here by the parties, the judgment could not well have been otherwise than it was. It is not necessary to set out here other points of objection made by defendants. The judgment will, therefore, be affirmed.