45 Mo. App. 264 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1891
— In the attachment suit of Knapp, Stout & Co. against Swiggett Bros, one Hale Standley
The material facts not being in dispute — there being no evidence to weigh — we must review their legal effect, and decide whether the judgment is warranted by such undisputed facts. Bruen v. Fair Ass’n, 40 Mo. App. 425; Waddell v. Williams, 50 Mo. 216; Henry v. Bliss, 75 Mo. 194; Douglass v. Orr, 58 Mo. 573; Moore v. Hutchinson, 69 Mo. 429. The attaching creditors contend that the assignment of the judgment was fraudulent as to them. So that the sole question is, whether the assignment which was executed before the service of the garnishment, but not attested by the clerk until a couple of hours afterwards, was effectual to vest the title of the judgment in the interpleaders, as against the lien of
The attachment creditors were not purchasers of the judgment for value from the attachment defendants, and have no rights as such. At the date of the garnishment the attachment defendants had no interest in the judgment that was subject to attachment as their property. Stillwell v. McDonald, 39 Mo. 283. The denominating principle of this case is analogous to that in those cases where it was ruled that a tona fide purchaser of real estate, who had failed to record his deed until after judgment is obtained against the vendor, but who records it before a sale under the judgment, would hold it against a purchaser under the judgment; and this, though the judgment and sale be in a suit by attachment. Davis v. Ormsby, 14 Mo. 175; Valentine v. Havener, 20 Mo. 133; Potter v. McDowell, 43 Mo. 93; Stillwell v. McDonald, 39 Mo. 283 ; Fox v. Hall, 74 Mo. 315; Vance v. Corrigan, 78
Even if the objection to the sufficiency of the verification of the interplea could be raised here for the first time, we think, since it is made by the attorney lor the interpleaders, that it is sufficient.
It results that the judgment of the circuit court will be affirmed.