83 Mo. App. 85 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1900
This is a contest between a sheriff and a constable as to the validity of their respective levies of executions against a common debtor. The property claimed by each officer is “one pair of track scales, one iron heater and sixtvthree pulleys.” The process in -the hands of the sheriff was upon a judgment of the circuit court; that in the hands of the constable was upon a justice’s judgment. The return of the sheriff was made on the twenty-third of April, 1898, and shows a levy, first, upon lot 56, block 7, Louisiana, Missouri; secondly, upon certain chattels embracing those described above, which the return recites were on the lot. The levy of the constable was made about thirty days subsequent to that of the sheriff, and was in all respects legally sufficient, unless the prior levy by the sheriff charged the property in dispute with a lien which overrode the right of the constable to' seize it in behalf of the process in his hands.
The only question, therefore, presented on this appeal by the constable from a judgment against him in the replevin suit brought by the sheriff for the recovery of the foregoing property, is as to the legal sufficiency of the levy made by the sheriff under the facts and circumstances which characterized it. The property in question was formerly used in connection with the operation of a flouring mill standing on said lot 56, block 7, which had been destroyed. This mill was destroyed by fire about two years before the levy, leaving the brick walls and foundation only standing, all the woodwork, doors, windows, etc., having been consumed. Since then no business has been conducted in the mill, and at the time of the levy by the sheriff it had lain idle for about two years in an exposed and unfastened state and contained such relics of the machinery and appurtenances as had not been removed from within the walls. * At said time the pulleys or band wheels were wholly detached from the machinery of the mill, and were either lying looselyin a coal bin, or were scattered in and
The judgment is therefore reversed.