74 Mo. App. 292 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1898
— I agree that the judgment in this ease-should be reversed and the cause remanded for retrial, but I am not able to concur in the opinion of Judge Biggs, that the law of February 25, 1891 (Laws of 1891, p. 45), have no application to attachment proceedings before a justice of the peace.. If the law of 1891 is inapplicable to this case, then there is no law on.
SEPARATE OPINION BY JUDGE BIGGS.
In the assignment of causes the record in this case came to me. I wrote an opinion reversing the judgment and remanding the cause. The opinion was returned with the indorsement that my associate judges concurred in the result only.
I declined to file the opinion, and I returned the record with the request that an opinion be written expressing the views of the court, to the end that the circuit court might have some guide in the retrial of the case. Judge Bland has prepared an opinion, in which Judge Bond concurs, and to which I can not agree. As the question involved is an important one, I deem it proper to state my views in a separate opinion.
There is but little controversy as to the facts.
The relator sued one Armstead by attachment before a justice of the peace. The defendant York, who was the constable of the township, served the attachment writ by levying upon a horse. There was a plea in abatement. Upon the trial of the issues presented by the plea in abatement the finding was for Armstead. Upon the same day there was a judgment for the debt, there being no defense to the merits. These proceedings were had on the twenty-ninth day of December, 1893. An appeal was granted to the plaintiff on the second day of January, 1894. On a
An execution was issued on the judgment and returned unsatisfied. On the day following the dissolution of the attachment before the justice the defendant York delivered the horse to Armstead. The relator claims that the delivery was unauthorized. The evidence for the defendant tended to show that in compliance with a demand of Armstead the horse was delivered to him; that the delivery was made before an appeal was asked for, and before York had notice that an appeal would be taken. The evidence for the relator was to the effect that his attorney notified York on the day the judgment was rendered that an appeal would be perfected as soon as it was possible to do so. The circuit court instructed the jury that the defendants were not-liable if the horse was delivered on the demand of Armstead and before an appeal had been granted. The theory of the instruction is that the verdict of the jury on the plea in abatement dissolved the attachment, and that unless the relator appealed instanter it was the duty of York to redeliver the horse to Armstead.
There can be no question that the effect of a verdict for the defendant on a plea in abatement before a justice of the peace is to dissolve the attachment. The statute so provides. (R. S. 1889, sec. 595.) Independent of the statute it is the rule announced by all the text-books and decisions. Neither is there any question under the authorities that upon a dissolution of the attachment the defendant is entitled to a return of the property. Mr. Drake says: “When an attachment has been dissolved by reason of a judgment in favor of the defendant, or otherwise, the special property of the officer in the attached effects is at end, and he is bound to restore them to the defendant, if he is still the
The question is, when must such an appeal be taken in order to continue the attachment lien. My associates in effect decide that plaintiff has the full time allowed by law for taking appeals in ordinary cases. I have been unable to find any authority which supports this ruling. Mr. Drake says: “Upon the dissolution of an attachment, if the plaintiff intends to appeal from the order of dissolution, he should do so immediately, or obtain an order of the court staying the dissolution for a time sufficient to enable him to perfect an appeal in such form as to operate as a supersedeas. In the absence of such an order the officer is not bound to retain the property to enable the plaintiff to appeal, but may without delay return it to the defendant.” Mr. Shinn says: “It is no part of the officer’s duty to retain the property to enable the plaintiff in the attachment to appeal from the order dissolving it and to give a stay-bond” (note 5, p. 657). Some of the eases hold that in order to continue the attachmént in. force an appeal from the judgment of dissolution must be taken instanter or the officer must be instructed by order of court to hold the property
My associates also decide that when there is a judgment dissolving the attachment, it is the duty of the constable to hold the attached 'property until he receives an order from the justice directing him to deliver it to the defendant in the attachment. This ruling is likewise without authority to support it. In fact it is in the very teeth of the decision of the supreme court in State ex rel. v. Fitzpatrick, 64 Mo. loc. cit. 188.
In discussing the duty of a constable upon the dissolution of an attachment the court said: “The statute does not require that any order shall be made, when an attachment is dissolved, for the return of the property attached to the defendant in the attachment.
My own opinion is that if the relator desired to retain the advantage of the attachment it was his duty to take his appeal promptly — that is within a reasonable time under all the circumstances. This I think is the better rule, for if the appeal must be taken instantaneously as some of the cases hold, then a redelivery may be made instanter, which would put it in the power of the defendant and the officer to cut off an appeal in any case. Whether the relator perfected his appeal within a reasonable time, is, in my judgment, a question of fact which ought to have been submitted to the jury.