70 Mo. App. 663 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1897
This case shortly stated is about this:
The levy of the attachment on the property of the relator was the direct and proximate cause of the damages for which the suit is brought. Had there been no seizure and detention of relator’s property under the writ of attachment there would have been no occasion for him to have gone to the expense of employing attorneys to interplead and claim it in the attachment suit. No good reason has or can be suggested why an interpleader in the attachment is not as much entitled to the benefit of the indemnity bond provided by the statute as any defendant or garnishee. This is made plain from the very terms employed in the statute itself. None of the authorities to which defendants in their brief call our attention have any application to a case like the present. The tidal court erred in refusing the relator’s instruction which has been already quoted.
The judgment accordingly will be reversed and cause remanded.