25 Mo. App. 208 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1887
delivered the .opinion of the court.
This was an action upon an attachment bond. The attachment was sued out in an action which appears to-have been commenced under section 2122, Revised Statutes, for damages for the death of the wife of the plaintiff in the attachment suit. The original petition in that suit charged the defendant with unlawfully and feloniously killing the wife of the plaintiff. The attachment was sued out under the provisions of sub-section. 12, of section 398, Revised Statutes, which is as follows : “In any court having competent jurisdiction, the plaintiff in any civil action may have an attachment.
Against the objections of the defendants, evidence was admitted of the proceedings subsequent to thp voluntary dismissal of the attachment, and as to the value of the legal services rendered by the attorneys of the defendant in the attachment suit (plaintiff in this action), and as to other costs and expenditures incurred
It thus appears that this court did not have before it in The State to use v. McHale (16 Mo. App. 478), the question which arises upon the present record ; but that, in that case, as in the three cases in the supreme court, which are relied upon by the plaintiff in this action (The State to use v. Thomas, 19 Mo. 613; The State to use v. Beldsmeier, 56 Mo. 226; The State ex rel. v. Stark, 75 Mo. 566), the attachment was not dissolved until final judgment in favor of the defendant upon the merits, and a contest of the ground of the action upon the merits was necessary to procure a dissolution of the attachment. In all such cases as the above, these decisions hold that the damages which arise in a subsequent action upon the attachment bond embrace, not only those direct damages which the plaintiff has sustained from the issuing out of the attachment, but also include the costs and expenses of defending the suit on its merits. This extended statement is proper. for the purpose of showing that the learned judge of the circuit court was not bound by our intimation, above quoted, as a controlling authority.
But, while the question is now apparently presented for decision for the first time in this state, we .feel bound to say that the language above quoted from our decision in The State to use v. McHale (16 Mo. App. 478), embodied the clear impression of all the members of the court as to the law under our present statute ; and, to the rule thus stated, after reexamining the question, we adhere. It should be observed that all of the decisions above cited, from the supreme court, arose upon the statute as it stood prior to the revision of 1879. This revision introduced a new rule on the subject in section 439, which, among other things, recites.: “If the plaintiff, in case the judgment be against him (on the plea in abatement), fails to appeal from such judgment, or, if
It is true that the case under consideration does not fall within the literal terms of section 439, since the attachment was not dissolved by a judgment of the court on the plea in abatement, which was filed; but, when the plea in abatement was filed, the plaintiff, instead of contesting his right to maintain the attachment, voluntarily dismissed the same. The rule of damages in an action on the attachment bond must be the same in the one case as in the other; since it would be absurd to hold that the plaintiff, by voluntarily dismissing the attachment after plea in abatement filed, would put himself and his own sureties in a worse condition in respect of damages arising on the attachment bond, than they would have been in if he had put the defendant to the additional expense of a contest and trial under the plea in abatement.
But our conclusion becomes still more clear when we consider the nature of the amended petition, which
The judgment of the circuit court is accordingly reversed, and the cause remanded.