65 Mo. App. 487 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1896
The suit is upon' the sheriff's official bond for conversion of the relator’s property. Touching the facts of the case there is no substantial controversy, and the only question of law arising on this appeal is whether, on the uncontroverted facts, and the inferences which may reasonably be drawn from them, the court trying the case was justified in declaring as a matter of law that the plaintiff could not recover.
The facts briefly stated are these: One Pearce, being largely indebted to the relator, executed to him a chattel mortgage covering among other things twenty-three rolls of leather. The leather thus mortgaged was bought by Pearce one or two days preceding the •execution of the mortgage from N. R. Allen & Son. The latter, learning of the record of the mortgage, sued out a writ of replevin, presumably on the ground that, the purchase being fraudulent, the title of Pearce to the leather was voidable. Pearce was named as the sole defendant in the writ. This writ was placed in the hands of the sheriff’s deputy, who proceeded with it to .the relator’s place of business, and inquired of the rela
There is not a tittle of evidence in the case that the sheriff or his deputy were, at any time prior to the delivery of the leather to Allen & Son, notified by any one, or even that they had reasonable grounds to believe, that the leather mentioned in the writ was claimed by the relator. There is no pretense that either the relator or his attorney, at any time prior to the delivery of the leather to Allen & Son, by word or act asserted any title in the relator. All the testimony is compatible with a belief on part of the sheriff, that the leather was in possession of the relator as bailee of Pearce.
"We have stated the facts thus fully, because we wish to avoid the possibility of a misapprehension of the point on which we rest our decision. The law is well settled that the levy of a writ against A. on property in the possession of B. is prima facie wrongful as against B. The possession of the property by a person not named in the writ is sufficient notice to the officer that he must act at his peril. That ruléis elementary, and supported by many cases in this state. State v. Moore, 19 Mo. 369; Merchants Bank v. Abernathy, 32
Nor can the relator derive any benefit from the fact that he demanded the return of the goods the next day, and after the sheriff had turned the same over to Allen & Son. Had such demand been made prior to the delivery of the goods to Allen & Son, a subsequent delivery by the officer to the latter would have been tortious as against the relator, provided the relator was the true owner. We are not aware, however, how an act valid at the time can subsequently become tortious, simply because the party charged has failed to do something which he was powerless to do.
The case, therefore, is simply this: The officer’s