92 Tenn. 614 | Tenn. | 1893
This is an action of trespass commenced in the Circuit Court of Shelby County by P. McCadden & Co. against B. Lowenstein & Bros., for the alleged wrongful taking and conversion to their own use of a certain stock of merchandise, claimed to be the property of P. Mc-Cadden & Co.
The undisputed facts out of which the present controversy has arisen are as follows: In March, 1887, one PI. P. Lennox was engaged in the mercantile business at Pendleton, in the State of Arkansas. He had for some time been a customer of P. McCadden & Co. and B. Lowenstein & Bros., of Memphis, and, at the date above mentioned, he
We understand it to be admitted that, at the date of this transfer, the said Lennox was indebted to P. McCadden & Co. in the sum of $7,290.38, the consideration expressed in the bill of sale, and it is undisputed that, at this time, the said Lennox was indebted to the firm of' B. Low-enstein & Bros, in the sum of $1,400.
It further appears that after the transfer Lennox returned to Pendleton, opened up a new set of. books, and conducted the business in the name of P. McCadden & Co. for about eight days, when he was discharged, and the business was placed in charge of one Watkins, as the agent of P. Mc-Cadden & Co. The business was thus conducted for a month or more in the name of P. McCad-den & Co., who, from time to time, replenished the stock with goods from their store in Memphis.
On the second of May, 1887, Lowenstein & Bros, sued Lennox in the Circuit Court of Desha County, Arkansas, on a note for $1,357, and, at
P. McCadden & Co. procured a release of the goods by executing a forthcoming bond, under the provisions of § 327, Mansfield’s Digest, Statutes of Arkansas, as follows: “ The Sheriff may deliver any attached property to the party,in whose possession it was found, upon the execution, in the presence of the Sheriff, of a bond to the plaintiff by such person, with one or more sufficient sureties, to the effect that the obligors are bound, in double the value of the property, that the defendant shall perform the judgment of the Court in the action, or that the property or its value shall be forthcoming and subject to the orders of the Court for the satisfaction of such judgment.”
P. McCadden & Co. afterwards appeared in the Circuit Court of Desha County and filed a petition to be allowed to interplead, claiming, the title to the goods attached. The day following Loweustein & Bros, filed a motion, in writing, alleging that the forthcoming bond made by P. McCadden & Co. was defective, and the Court ordered that another bond be executed by McCadden & Co., in accordance with the requirements of the statute. Mc-Cadden & Co. failed or refused to execute another
The Court, in rendering judgment in favor of Lowenstein & Bros, against Lennox, awarded execution, which came into the hands of the Sheriff, who, being unable to find all the goods originally attached, levied the execution on other goods found in the store-house of P. McCadden & Co., at Pen-dleton, Aide. The property taken under the execution, and that repossessed by the Sheriff' under the original attachment, was sold, after advertisement, and the proceeds paid over to Lowenstein & Bros., but the amount realized did not quite satisfy the judgment recovered.
It is claimed on behalf of McCadden & Co., that all the goods taken — -those which had been attached and of which the Sheriff repossessed himself, and
The first error assigned is that the Court below allowed P. McCadden to testify that “ he was at Warner, Lincoln County, Arle., in September following the judgment and proceedings in the suit of B. Lowenstein & Bros, against II. E. Lennox, at Watson, in Lesha County, Ark., defending an application made by the creditors of II. E. Len-nox for a receiver of the goods and property which Lennox , had transferred to P. McCadden & Co., at Pendleton; that the application was before the Circuit Judge in vacation, and Mr. Weatherford was present as the counsel of Mc-Cadden '& Co., and R. T. White, the attorney of Lowenstein & Bros, in their suit at Watson against II. E. Lennox, which had gone into judgment, was present as one of the counsel of the plaintiff in the application; that the application was argued at some length, and indeed very boldly, remarks having been made and the parties offer
The exception to this evidence saved by counsel for plaintiff in , error was, viz.: “ To each of the said questions and answers, respectively, the defendants at the time objected, because the same were irrelevant and incompetent.” It is insisted that this exception is too general to challenge the attention of the lower Court to the real objection to the testimony, and that, under the rulings of this Court, such general exception cannot be relied on for a review of the objectionable evidence.
It is plainly the duty of counsel to take the judgment of the Court on the specific ground then made, so that this Court can review it. The contrary practice gives the party an opportunity to state one ground in the Court below, which may be properly overruled, and to rely upon entirely different ground here. Knoxville Iron Co. v. Dobson, 15 Lea, 409. But when evidence is not competent for any purpose, or is wholly irrelevant, a general objection would be sufficient. The evidence ■excepted to in this case was not competeni for any purpose, and introduced collateral matters which were res inter alios acta, and highly prejudicial to plaintiff' in error. The Court allowed McCadden to testify to what occurred at a trial at Warner, Lincoln County, Ark., on an application for ■ the appointment of a receiver in a suit between Len-nox and other creditors. McCadden was allowed •to testify to the statements of the Judge at Warner that, on a former application, he had decided that the bill of sale from Lennox to McCadden was very fraudulent, but, upon hearing the facts, he found the bill of sale good. The Court also
B. Lowenstein & Bros, were not hound by any thing said or done on the application. 1 Wharton on Evidence, Secs. 760, 764, 820, 828. The-exceptions should have been sustained and the evidence excluded. The second assignment of error is that the Circuit Judge refused certain instructions, numbered one to seven, inclusive, and set out. at pages 124 to 134 of the record.
It appears from the record that these requests were submitted to the Court immediately after the close of the evidence, and before the general charge was delivered. The record recites that the Court overruled, and refused-to give the said instructions, except as they are embodied in its general charge. It then gave the jury the following instructions— and here follows the general charge of the Court. The specific instructions asked were not renewed after the delivery of the general charge, and, under well-established rules of practice, and repeated decisions of this Court, error cannot be predicated upon such refusal to charge. Railroad v. Foster, 4 Pickle, 673; Railroad v. Hendricks, 4 Pickle, 718; Roller v. Bachman, 5 Lea, 158.
The next assignment of error is that the Court erred in the following charge to the jury, to wit: “ The Court charges you that McCadden & Co. had the right to give a bond to retain the goods, levied on in the case of B. Lowenstein & Bros, v.. Lennox; that they had the right to come in and.
It is insisted on behalf of defendant in error that McCadden & Co. never entered into any bond which could have the effect of making them parties to the case of Lowenstein v. Lennox. It is true,, the Supreme Court of Arkansas decided in that case that such bond was not a valid statutory bond, because not conditioned that the defendant.
In 2 Black on Judgments, Sec. 576, it is said that where a third person intervenes in a pending action for the purpose of claiming the fund or the chattel in controversy, as his own, he is concluded by the judgment in that action, and cannot after-wards sue on the same claim, at least in respect to any title acquired prior to the intervention. But he must actively and substantially make himself a party in order to he hound. ' Thus, where one claiming personal property attached in an ac-tiou against another appeared in such action and took time to file a petition of intervention, but withdrew without filing such petition, it was held
Ah this is conceded by counsel for plaintiff in error, but it is insisted that the interplea was no part of the forthcoming bond McCadden ,& Co. gaye the Sheriff to secure the release of the property attached; that the bond and interplea were distinct steps taken in the attachment proceedings, and had no relation to each other. The bond was executed by McCadden & Co. in May, at the time the goods were attached, and the interplea was not filed until August, when the Court convened. It is insisted that when the Court permitted McCad-den & Co. to withdraw the interplea without prejudice, it did not affect the legal status of McCad-den & Co., as' fixed in that lawsuit by the execution of the forthcoming bond.
The insistence of counsel is that by executing the forthcoming bond under Section 327 of Mansfield’s Digest, Arkansas Statutes, and recovering the property* attached by the Sheriff-, McCadden & Co. bound -themselves,,in the manner shown by the bond, for the performance of the judgment of the Court in that case. They thereby made themselves parties to the suit, independent of any intei-plea they might file, or any claim they might interpose to the property attached. What, then, was the effect of the execution of the replevy or forthcoming bond by McCadden in the case of Lowen-stein Bros. v. Lennox, and did they thereby become parties to that case in such a sense that they are
Wé think these principles apply to this casé. The record in this case shows that P. McCadden & Co. had notice of the attachment proceedings
There is another branch of the case that remains to be considered. It appears from the record that
The judgment of the Court below is reversed,1 and the cause remanded for a new trial.