193 Mo. App. 670 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1916
This is an action in replevin. Plaintiff was the owner of a pasture in Greenwood county, Kansas, and on August 21,1913, one Wiershing, being the owner and in possession of eighty head of cattle, put them into plaintiff’s possession to he kept on said pasture for the rest of the grazing season for the sum of $240 the owner agreeing not to take the cattle away without first paying the pasturage.
At the time this was done the defendant held two chattel mortgages on the cattle which were on record in Greenwood county.
On Sunday, September 28, 1913, Wiershing, without plaintiff’s knowledge or consent, moved said cattle from the pasture and shipped them to the defendant at Kansas City, Missouri, where they arrived on the morning of September 29, 1913, and were there taken possession of by defendant.
As soon as plaintiff discovered the cattle had been shipped, he demanded of Wiershing and the defendant payment of his bill for pasturing the cattle, claiming an agister’s lien thereon. They both refused to pay; Whereupon plaintiff demanded of defendant the possession of a sufficient number of said cattle, to-wit, five or six head, to protect and satisfy his aforesaid lien. Defendant refused. Thereupon, on the same day,
Plaintiff prevailed before the justice and defendant appealed to the circuit court where the case was, by agreement, tried before the court without a jury.
The trial court made a finding of facts in accordance with those hereinbefore stated, and, in addition to these, further found that plaintiff’s bill was reasonable; that the actual value of the five head replevied was $388.20; that defendant sold the remainder of said cattle and applied the proceeds toward the satisfaction of its chattel mortgages, but that there yet remains due on one the sum of $77.96 and on the other $312.43 with interest, (which, of course, is more than the value of the cattle replevied).
The court further found that “at the time when plaintiff and said Roy Wiershing made their contract, and át all time involved in this suit, it was the law of the State of Kansas, as follows, to-wit:
“The keepers of livery stables, and all others engaged in feeding horses, cattle, hogs or other stock, •shall have a lien upon such property for the feéd and •care bestowed by them upon the same, and if reasonable or stipulated charges for such feed' and care be not paid within sixty days after the same becomes due, •the property or so much thereof as may be necessary to pay such charges and the expenses of publication and sale, may be sold as provided in this Act.”
The court further found that “at all said times it was the law of the State of Kansas as laid down by the .Supreme Court of the State of Kansas that the
The court further found the value of plaintiffs interest in the property and also assessed his damages for the detention at the sum of $25; that plaintiff’s lien for the feed and care of said cattle was superior to the chattel mortgages of defendant; and that he was entitled to the possession of the five head of cattle described in the writ.' Accordingly the court rendered judgment in plaintiff’s favor for possession of the cattle and for $25, assessed as damages for the detention thereof.
Afterwards, at the same term', the court, on its ■own motion, set aside the judgment “for the reason that the justice of the peace before whom the cause originated had no jurisdiction of the cause of action or the subject-matter,” and, dismissing plaintiff’s petition, rendered judgment for defendant.
After plaintiff’s motion to set aside the dismissal .and to grant a new trial had been overruled, the plaintiff duly appealed.
It thus appears that the sole ground upon which the judgment in plaintiff’s favor was set aside is that the justice of the peace had no jurisdiction.
The cattle involved in this litigation were in Kansas; the parties to the agistment of the cattle were there, and so were the defendant’s chattel mortgages. The rights of the parties were, therefore, fixed by the laws of that State. The questions whether plaintiff had an agister’s lien, and whether such lien is superior •or inferior to defendant’s prior chattel mortgages, are
Defendant says that, inasmuch as the Missouri law makes a prior mortgage superior to an agister’s lien, plaintiff’s right to possession of the cattle can only be upheld by virtue of Kansas law, which, unlike Missouri, makes the agister’s lien superior to a prior mortgage, and, therefore, plaintiff, in order to sustain his cause, must necessarily invoke the Kansas law. All of which is, doubtless, very true; and plaintiff does not deny this fact. But defendant contends that a Missouri justice of the peace has no power or authority to try any case wherein plaintiff’s cause of action rests, in any degree, upon, the laws of a foreign State, or where, in order to sustain a case, it is necessary for the justice to interpret foreign statutes. Defendant urges this as one of its grounds for the claim that the justice, before whom the case originated, had no jurisdiction.
The point raised is certainly novel, and we know of no authority holding to that effect. It is undoubtedly true that the jurisdiction of a justice of the peace is statutory and strictly limited by the statutes of this State. But we know of no statute denying to a, justice of the peace the right to try a case whenever the decision thereof may necessarily involve the interpretation of a foreign law or statute. Indeed, section 1736, Revised Statutes 1909, provides that whenever a cause of action has accrued under or by virtue of the laws of any other State or territory such cause of action may be brought “in any of the courts of this State” by the person entitled to the proceeds of such cause of action by the laws of the State where the cause of action accrued, provided such person is authorized to bring such action by the laws of the foreign State.
Defendant, as a further ground for contending that the justice had no jurisdiction, says that under' our
At first glance it would look as if the jurisdiction of the justice in this case was governed by section 7758, Revised Statutes 1909, fixing' $350 as the limit of justices’ jurisdiction, but, in this case, the limit of the jurisdiction is raised to $500 by section 4 of an Act of the Legislature approved March 25,1913, found in Session Acts of Mo. 1913, page 395. As the value of the property sought to be recovered and the damages claimed for the detention thereof are, in the aggregate, within that amount, the justice had original jurisdiction under said Act so far as the value of the property and the damages are concerned.
As this was an action in replevin, plaintiff could properly bring his suit in Kaw township, Jackson county, Missouri, since, although he did not reside there, yet the defendant did and the cattle were there. [Sec. 7399, R. S. 1909.] That was where the cause of action in replevin finally accrued or at least became complete, because there is where the defendant refused, after demand, to give them up. It is difficult to define the phrase “cause of action.” However, speaking in general terms and as applied to this case, we may say the cause of action is made up of plaintiff’s right on one side and the obligation, duty or wrong of the defendant upon the other. Plaintiff’s cause of action may, therefore, be said to consist of his right to possession, of the cattle under the laws and decisions .of Kan
. Under the statute of Kansas, section 4809, Dasslér’s Gen’l Stats. 1909, quoted in the trial court’s finding, the plaintiff had an agister’s lien on the cattle. [Brown v. Holmes, 13 Kans. 482; Kelsay v. Lane, 28 Kan. 225.] This lien charge for the, whole herd entitled plaintiff to ask for the possession of only five of them, since he, has the right to enforce the lien for keeping the whole herd upon the five head. [2 Cyc. 319; Barse v. Adams, 48 S. W. 1023; Yeardsley v. Gray, 140 Pa. St. 238.] The agister’s lien in Kansas is held to he superior even to a prior mortgage. [Case v. Allen, 21 Kans. 217; Kelsay v. Layne, 28 Kans. 218; Everett v. Barse Live Stock Com. Co., 115 Mo. App. 482.] And the right to take possession of the cattle and enforce his lien' is not destroyed by the surreptitious taking of the cattle out of Kansas into Missouri. [Everett v. Barse Live Stock Com. Co., supra.]
So far as this ease of replevin is concerned, the plaintiff, if he had obtained possession of the cattle could have returned them to Greenwood county and there proceeded to enforce his lien in accordance with the method pointed out by the statutes of Kansas. But, since the removal of the cattle from that place to Kansas City was done by the owner and the cattle were sold, in the manner at the place set out in the defendant’s mortgages, and defendant was also consenting to and profiting by the removal, the latter cannot he heard to complain because the cattle have not been taken back to Kansas for the purpose of enforcing the lien.. [Dale v. Council Bluffs Savings Bank, 65
It. is urged by defendant that certain remarks in Central Nat’l Bank v. Brecbeisen, 65 ICans. 807, bolds that plaintiff’s lien is inferior to defendant’s chattel mortgages. Defendant misinterprets tbe meaning of those remarks. All that is. meant in that case is that if tbe agister, through failure to observe some requirement of tbe statute in tbe enforcement of bis lien, cannot reply upon tbe statute but must fall back upon tbe lien given by contract, aside from and without regard to tbe statute, then such contract, being bis and tbe owner’s act, and not arising by force of tbe statute, will be subject to a prior chattel mortgage. But in this case, the agister bad not lost bis statutory right to a lien at tbe time tbe cattle were taken, nor bad- be lost such right at tbe time be brought this replevin suit. In other words, plaintiff has a lien by vrtue of tbe statute though tbe grazing of tbe cattle was made a matter of contract. - Indeed, defendant’s pleading, in effect, concedes that plaintiff’s lien is a statutory one.
Tbe judgment is reversed and tbe cause remanded 'with directions to reinstate tbe judgment .which was set aside by tbe trial court. Tbe other judges concur.