73 Mo. App. 667 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1898
Ames & Robins were engaged in the grocery and restaurant business at Neosho, Missouri, carrying a policy of insurance issued by the Aetna Insurance Company, a foreign corporation, on their wares, for $300. While so insured the property was totally destroyed by fire on January 21, 1896. On February 11, 1896, the assured gave a written direction to P. R. Smith, agent of the company to pay O. P. Dalton $200 out of the draft, which the assured expected to receive through him for the amount, upon proof for their loss, on account of the fire, and for that purpose they authorized an agent to sign their name to said draft, when it should come to his hands, and after making payment therein directed, to pay over the residue to themselves. On the seventeenth of February 1896, plaintiffs sued said Ames & Robins by attachment for a debt of $288.50, and on the twenty-sixth of March thereafter had service of a garnishment in said suit upon the agent authorized to receive service for the company. In its answer to this garnishment the insurance company admitted an indebtedness to Ames & Robins of $213.36, which amount was conceded by the parties to be due upon the policy, after proof of loss and adjustment. Thereupon O. P. Dalton inter-pleaded in said attachment suit, claiming to be the owner of $200 of the amount coming to the assured under the policy, by virtue of the written order given to him for that sum. There was a trial and judgment for the interpleader, from which the attaching plaintiffs appealed to this court.
The first error assigned is the refusal of the trial court to direct a verdict for the attaching plaintiffs. This position is well taken. A portion of a debt,
For its failure so to do the judgment herein will be reversed.