109 Mo. App. 432 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1905
This is an action on an attachment bond by the appellants. On March 3, 1899, Fred B. Parsons instituted an action of attachment against
The main contention between the parties was as to the value of the merchandise which was attached and sold; and on this subject the testimony varied widely. There is also a dispute as to the amount of the attorney’s fee the relators ought to recover, the defendants asserting there should be no more than $250 allowed for this item; whereas the relators claimed $800. The position of the defendants in regard to the attorney’s fee is that no fee paid by the relators can be recovered in the present action on the bond, except what reasonably was earned by the attorneys on the trial of the plea in abatement in the circuit court and not an amount to cover services in the trial on the merits or on the hearing of the appeal from the judgment on the plea in abatement.
A point is made against the sufficiency of the petition in assigning specific breaches of the bond. The breach assigned is that Parsons, the principal obligor, did not prosecute the attachment action with effect. His defeat on the plea in abatement was a clear breach of the condition of the bond and is the one specified. The petition might have been more carefully drawn, but it is good enough to support a verdict; no motion having been made for an order that it be made more definite.
In an instruction given in regard to the ascertainment of the damages sustained by the Clarks by reason of the wrongful attachment, seizure and sale of the stock of merchandise and fixtures, the court told the jury they should find from the evidence the market value of the merchandise on the date it was seized and add thereto the interest at six per cent from that date to December 8,1902, when the stock was sold, deducting from the amount the sum of $2,350, which the stock
We are far from agreeing with the defendant’s counsel that the measure of the value of the goods and the damages to be awarded for the attachment of them is what they brought at the forced sale by. the sheriff. It needs no citation of authorities to refute this contention. Various circumstances, such as the absence of bidders for cash, or the inclemency of the weather when the sale occurred, xnay have caused them' to
The Clarks were entitled to recover the reasonable amount paid out for attorneys’ fees in defending the attachment or the plea in abatement, both in the circuit court and the appellate court. [State v. McHale, 16 Mo. App. 478.] They were not entitled to recover for the services rendered by, the attorneys on the merits of the case after the dissolution of the attachment; which resulted on the trial of the plea in abatement. [State to use v. Fargo, 151 Mo. 280, 52 S. W. 199.] The court properly limited the jury, in awarding damages for attorneys’ fees, to reasonable compensation for the services rendered by the attorneys in connection with the attachment proper, and the defendants have no ground to complain on this score.
The opinion of this court rendered when the attachment suit was here on appeal was irrelevant and should not have been read to the jury. Remarks in it may have produced an impression harmful to the defendants. The answer in the present case confessed Parson’s failure to successfully prosecute and maintain his attachment and we see no proper purpose that could have been served by reading to the jury the opinion of this court.
No error has been assigned here on account of the unqualified instruction of the court to the jury to allow interest on the value of the goods, and we refrain from a decision as to whether the giving of interest should have been left to the discretion of the jury.
The judgment is reversed and the cause remanded.