114 Mo. App. 222 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1905
The following statement and opinion prepared by Judge Reybubn, when a member of this court, is adopted as the opinion of the court:
In November, 1898, plaintiff, an incorporated wholesale merchant of the city of St. Louis, brought an attachment suit against J. B. Sally, in the circuit court of Texas county, and caused the writ of attachment to be levied upon a stock of miscellaneous merchandise contained in a store at Arthurs Creek, situated in that county, invoiced and appraised by the sheriff at a total valuation of $1,540. N. C. Hassell interpleaded for the goods, and founded his claim thereto upon their purchase from the defendant, setting forth in his interplea that on November 12, 1897, and prior to the time of interpleading he conducted a general mercantile business
The answer of plaintiff specifically denied the ownership of interpleader, averred that the personalty was the property of the defendant, and their possession in Hassell for the purpose of assisting Sally in defrauding his creditors.
The third trial terminated in a verdict for the plaintiff in the attachment, two earlier jury trials failing to result in any verdict.
The testimony demonstrated that the interpleader had varied the occupation of a farmer in Texas county with peddling merchandise, and in August, 1897, built a storehouse near Arthurs Creek, and obtained the major part of the stock of merchandise that went into it from a general store at'Lecoma, a village in Dent county, belonging to Sally, who lived, however, in Rolla, Phelps county. The store near Arthurs Creek was opened August 12th and the goods were obtained from Sally’s stock from time to time till October 20th; on October 22d Sally appeared at Arthurs Creek with a statement, a settlemefit was had, a balance struck showing him a creditor of interpleader in a total sum, apparently $3,190, and the account closed by delivery by interpleader to Sally of a note for $3,060 bearing eight per cent interest maturing in one year, also checks aggregating $80 and $50 cash and receipt in full from Sally was returned. The testimony was voluminous and in hopeless conflict; at its close the interpleader asked fifteen in
The amendment of section 28, article 2, of the State Constitution, adopted at the general election November 8, 1900, went into effect upon the official canvass of the vote on the 19th day of December succeeding. [State v. Kyle, 166 Mo. 287, 65 S. W. 763.] The doubt intimated. by appellant whether it was seif-enforcing, and that it was clear from the language adopted in the resolution that it was not intended by the Legislature to be self-en-f oring as asserted, is negatived by the terms employed in framing it, as an inspection of the resolution itself will demonstrate. [Laws of 1899, 382.] Further, it is manifest that submitting it to the test promulgated in State v. Kyle, supra, the amendment is unquestionably self-executing, and requiring the aid of no ensuing legislative action to put it into operation. The legislation providing for the signature alone of the foreman, if the jury should all concur in the verdict, but if not unanimous the signatures also of those who agreed thereto, did not become operative until June 16,1901. [Laws 1901,190, and mem. at end of same.] Even if it be conceded that the unauthorized naked statement of the foreman, that the verdict was found by the constitutional majority then lately authorized, should be accepted the express