74 Mo. App. 570 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1898
— This action is upon a bond given by the defendants to indemnify a constable against any damages to D. B. Swift occasioned by the levy of an execution upon certain property claimed by the latter. There was a verdict and judgment for plaintiff. Defendant appealed. The chief point relied on to reverse this judgment is the alleged insufficiency of the evidence to show a change of possession of the property at the time of the making of a bill of sale thereof to D. B. Swift. It appears from the evidence that the property in question was mortgaged in 1896 to Swift to secure $825 due him, subject to a prior mortgage to secure $400, balance of purchase money due to one Beatty; that the property consisted of the stock in trade of a drugstore and was conducted as such by A. T. Smock, the son-in-law of D. B. Swift; that on the ninth of February, 1897, Swift, Smock and Beatty had a meeting, whereat an adjustment of affairs was reached, resulting in the sale of business and the stock in trade to Swift, and the assumption by him of the balance due to Beatty. At this time Swift placed a brother of Smock’s in charge of the store, but took no inventory of its contents, and neither removed the old sign nor put up one of his own, or gave any further notice of his acquisition of title to the property.
The controlling question on this appeal grows out of a construction of the statutory requirement for “an actual and continued change of possession,” to render sales of goods and chattels operative against creditors. R. S. 1889, sec. 5178.
This being so, the mere employment by plaintiff of the brother of the vendor as salesman, was not an