52 Mo. App. 660 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1893
The action is replevin for a sawmill. Upon its trial in the circuit court, the plain
The original petition was filed by Keen alone, and sought to recover one undivided one-half interest in the sawmill. It was accompanied by an affidavit to the effect that the property was unlawfully taken, and was then being wrongfully detained by the defendant at the county of. Carter. Subsequently the plaintiff Keen, discovering that it was necessary to do so, amended his petition so as to make his co-owner Bowles a. party plaintiff. Whether this course was warranted, under the peculiar facts of this case, by section 2099 of the Revised Statutes, and the liberal interpretation put upon that section in Butler v. Lawson, 72 Mo. 227, 246, is not before us, as the amendment was not excepted to. The amended petition stated that the plaintiffs were the owners and entitled to the possession of the property in controversy, and that the defendant, as sheriff of Carter county, had wrongfully seized under a writ of attachment against a stranger one undivided half interest therein, and at the date of the seizure closed down said property, and closed the operation of the mill entirely. The amended petition did not state in express terms that the property was wrongfully taken or detained by the defendant sheriff, nor was it accompanied by any affidavit. The defendant’s answer is not in the record.
It will be seen from the foregoing statement that the error assigned is not tenable. The rule in this state is, that the omission from the petition of averments essential to plaintiff’s recovery is not aided by verdict,
But we think the objection is otherwise untenable for various reasons. The amended petition expressly states that the property was wrongfully seized, and at the date of the seizure closed down. In absence of all averments, or evidence to the contrary, it is to be presumed that it was seized in the only manner in which tangible personal property can be legally seized on attachment, that is, by taking it into the possession of the officer. Eads, Adm’r, v. Stephens, 63 Mo. 90, 91. A wrongful taking, therefore, is sufficiently alleged by reasonable intendment. The same may be measurably said of a wrongful detention, since a state of matters once shown is presumed to continue unless the contrary appears, and since it is the officer’s duty to retain the property seized. Of course we concede that a presumption of evidence is not necessarily a presumption of pleading. The jury could not have found their verdict, unless a wrongful detention was shown, and, hence, the rule of aider by verdict applies. Jones v. Louderman, 39 Mo. 287, 290.
The objection that the judgment should have been arrested, because there was no affidavit to the amended
We conclude that under these circumstances we would not be justified in reversing the judgment on the sole ground that the petition states no cause of action, when the record by its silence on other points concedes that the case has been tried free from error.
All the judges concurring, the judgment is affirmed.