80 Mo. 271 | Mo. | 1883
On the 21st day of March, 1880, the plaintiff instituted a suit in the circuit court of Clinton county against the defendant, Gooclnow, for the purpose of enforcing the lien of the State for the taxes of 1878, amount
The prayer was for judgment, for taxes with interest, cost and commissions, and that the same be declared a lien on the land, and the lien enforced and the land sold to satisfy the j udgment. An affidavit for an attachment accompanied this petition, and a writ of attachment was issued and levied upon the engine, boiler and machinery attached thereto. The defendant, Ayler, filed an interplea, .claiming said engine, boiler and machinery as his by virtue of a purchase thereof from said Goodnow, on the 2nd day of March, 1880, for the sum of $500 paid in cash, and a note for $300 payable in six months thereafter. The case was tried upon the following agreed statement of facts :
“ It is hereby agreed that in 1878, and for several years prior thereto, defendant, Goodnow, rras the owner of lot 1, block 37 in the town of Lathrop, Clinton county, and that there was on said lot a structure known as a steam flouring mill, and that the engine, boiler and machinery described in the interplea was placed in said mill in the usual form for the purpose of supplying the motive power of said mill. That said mill was burned and destroyed in October, 1879, and that after its destruction said engine, boiler and machinery were stored upon the lot and remained there until*274 about March 1st, 1880, when interpleader entered into negotiations with Goodnow for their purchase, which negotiations ended in the sale of said property by Goodnow to interpleader, at the time and for the price stated in the in-terplea. That interpleader at the time of purchasing said property knew that said property had been used to run said mill prior to its destruction, but had no knowledge or information in relation to the taxes due on said lot. That after the purchase of said property the same was removed .from said lot to the station in Lathrop, and was then and there loaded on a flat-car on the line of the Hannibal & St. Joseph Railroad Company, for shipment to interpleader at Joplin, Missouri. That while said property was on said car this suit was begun, and the property attached by virtue of writ of attachment issued out of this court; that in the attachment suit no attachment bond was given by plaintiff.”
The interpleader then asked the following declarations of law:
1. Under the agreed statement the property in dispute did not become a fixture, and never was bound for payment of the taxes of the mill lot.
2. "When the mill burned down the property in dispute became and remained personal property.
3. When the mill burned down and Goodnow had sold the property in dispute to interpleader, and it was removed from the mill lot, it became personal property and was discharged from the lien for taxes.
4. After the property in question had been sold for a valuable consideration to interpleader, and it had been removed from the mill lot for shipment, it could not be seized for taxes due from Goodnow on account of the mill lot.
5. An action of attachment will not lie to enforce or aid the State’s lien for taxes on real estate.
6. The attachment writ was void for want of a bond.
Under the agreed statement and in the absence of testimony showing the contrary, we shall regard the engine and boilers as fixtures, The owner of the land has ud,-