40 Mo. App. 310 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1890
delivered the opinion of the court. .
This is an action of replevin in which the ownership of a stock of groceries is involved. Pauline Huels claimed to have purchased the goods from one J. H. Bueter, and the defendant Charles Boettger claimed the right to retain them by virtue of a levy made by him as constable under a writ of attachment, in which his codefendants were plaintiffs and J. H. Bueter was the defendant. The case was submitted to the court on an agreed statement of facts ; a judgment was entered for the plaintiffs, and the defendants have appealed.
It appears from the agreed statement of facts that on the sixth day of March, 1889, Pauline Huels purchased the goods in controversy from J. H. Bueter. She also purchased the fixtures belonging to, and used by, Bueter in conducting the business, together with a horse and delivery wagon. Mrs. Huels paid one thous- and dollars for this property, and the defendants conceded that the purchase was made in good faith, but they contend that there was not such a delivery of the
It was also agreed that, at the time of the levy, the plaintiffs were in the actual possession of the goods-; that they protested against the levy, and claimed that the property had been purchased by Mrs. Huels. Notwithstanding this the levy was made, and Mrs. Huels gave a forthcoming bond to the constable. The attachment proceedings were sustained and judgment entered against Bueter. The plaintiffs were ordered by the justice to deliver the property to the constable; thereupon the plaintiffs brought this action under the statute relating to the claim and delivery of personal property.
The defendants challenge the validity of the judgment on three grounds: First. The purchase by plaintiffs from Bueter was, as to the creditors of Bueter, fraudulent and void. Second. By giving the forthcoming bond, the plaintiffs are estopped from denying
I. The validity of the sale is questioned on the ground that there was not such a delivery of the possession of the goods as is required by the statute. This question has so often been the subject of judicial investigation that it is useless for us to quote the statute, or enter into a general discussion of its proper interpretation. We are of the opinion that the construction placed upon it by Wagner, J., in Claflin v. Rosenberg, 42 Mo. 439, was a reasonable interpretation of its meaning, and that some of the subsequent decisions have had a tendency to mystify, rather than to throw additional light on, the meaning of the statute and its practical application. In the case cited the court made use of the following language : “ There must be a complete change of the dominion and control over the property, and some act which will operate as a divesture of title and possession from the vendor, and a transference into the vendee. This necessarily excludes the idea of a joint or concurrent possession. It may not be essential or indispensable that the goods should be-moved into a new or different house; but there must be some open, notorious or visible act, clearly and unequivocally indicative of delivery and possession, such as taking an invoice, putting up a new sign, or any other reasonable means which would impart notice to a prudent man that a change had taken place.” When we apply the foregoing rules of construction to the conceded facts in this case, we must hold that the delivery of the possession of the goods to Mrs. Huels by Bueter was sufficient to satisfy the statute. There was an entire change in the management of the business ; Bueter left the premises and had no further control of the goods ; the store room was changed in many particulars; Mrs. Huels
II. The defendants’ second and third objections may be considered together. In both the doctrine of estoppel is invoked. In the first place the defendants insist that the fact that the plaintiffs gave a forthcoming bond is sufficient to estop them from asserting title to the goods. There is no warrant in law for such a doctrine. There can be no estoppel on account of the bond, unless it contains recitals tending to show that the property seized was admitted by the plaintiffs to be the property of Bueter. If such were the case, then the plaintiffs would be estopped by the terms of their bond. But there is nothing in the bond that ean be tortured into such an admission; therefore, the question of
Lastly it is urged that a failure by plaintiffs to make a written claim to the property at the time of the levy ought to estop Mrs. Huels from denying Bueter’s ownership of the goods at the time of the seizure. It is conceded that Mrs. Huels protested against the levy, and verbally notified the constable that the goods belonged to her and that Bueter had no interest in them ; but it is urged that this was not sufficient, and that, under such circumstances, the plaintiffs ought to have filed with the constable a written claim, and, having failed to do so, they ought now to be estopped from asserting such claim. In support of this position the defendants rely on the case of McElfatrick v. Macauley, 15 Mo. App. 102, In that case a cashier’s check was levied on- in the hands of Fletcher, the interpleader, as the property of Macauley, the defendant in' the attachment. Fletcher, without making any claim to the check at the time of the levy, gave a forthcoming bond, and, after the attachment had been sustained and judgment rendered against Macauley, and an execution returned nulla bona, he delivered the check into court and sought to enforce his claim to it by an interplea. The court held that he would not be permitted to assert a claim to the check, and the main reason for the ruling is to be found in . the following paragraph of the opinion: “After levying his attachment upon property which is apparently that of his debtor, the sheriff taking a bond for the forthcoming of the property when ordered by the court, he (plaintiff) is entitled to consider his debt secure, and to relax his efforts. If his debtor have other property, he may get it beyond the reach of process ; and if, after the attachment suit was entirely ended, the principal in the forthcoming bond can come into court and say : Although I gave bond for the forthcoming of this property when ordered by the court, and
As we find no error in the record the judgment of the circuit court will be affirmed.