104 Mo. App. 113 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1904
The interpleader, Mrs. Fannie Eu-bank, appealed from an order of the circuit court setting aside a verdict in her favor and granting a new trial. The litigation is over a mare attached at the suit of the plaintiff as the property of the defendant Nelson Eubank, whose wife the interpleader is. She filed her verified petition or claim for the mare after the levy of the attachment, and a trial of her right to the property ensued in which she prevailed. A motion for new trial was made by the plaintiff and sustained. It assigned six reasons why a new trial should be granted, among which was one that the verdict was against the evidence. It appears to be taken for granted by appellant’s counsel that the new trial was granted because no proof was made that the mare had been seized under the attachment writ, or withheld from appellant’s possession, and his argument aims to convince us that the court erred in so holding. We would scarcely lay much stress on the omission to introduce the constable’s return of the writ, showing a levy on the mare; for the ease was tried by both sides on the assumption that the animal had been levied on and taken; and, besides, there was some testimony tending to' prove the fact. The difficulty with the interpleader’s appeal is that the order sustaining the motion for new trial contains no statement of the reason or ground on which the circuit court sustained it, as the statutes provided it should. R. S. 1899, sec. 801. We are, therefore, powerless to overrule that court’s decision unless every assignment in the