43 Mo. App. 477 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1891
This is an action of replevin, brought by plaintiff Stein against defendant Burnett, for the recovery of some horses and cattle claimed by the plaintiff, but which defendant, as constable in Johnson county, had levied upon as the property of one Elam Spillman, defendant in an attachment suit of Eads & Co. ®. Spillman. Spillman was a farmer and stock-dealer, residing on land owned by him seven miles northwest of Warrensbiirg, while plaintiff Stein, his brother-in-law, resided in the same neighborhood and occasionally worked on Spillman’s place. Spillman had become largely in debt to various parties, Eads & Co. among the number, and in the early part of September, 1888, departed for parts unknown, leaving his creditors unprovided for — having disposed of all his property beforehand. Eads & Co. brought attachment, alleging as grounds therefor the fraudulent disposition of property,and that Spillman was about to move out of the state with intent to change his domicile. Under this writ of attachment defendant Burnett, as constable, seized the property in dispute, then in plaintiff’s possession. Stein thereupon brought replevin. At the trial, after all the evidence was in, the court gave a peremptory instruction for defendant, when plaintiff took a nonsuit with leave to move to set the same aside — which motion was made, was by the court overruled, arid plaintiff now prosecutes this appeal. The propriety of the court’s action,in thus taking the case from the jury,
Spillman, at the time of this alleged sale to Stein, was about to leave the state with intent to change his domicile. He was not, therefore, entitled to hold this property as exempt from said attachment. R. S. 1879, sec. 416. Since then Spillman could invoke no such protection from the statute of exemptions, neither can his pretended vendee. State ex rel. Fowler v. Chaney, 36 Mo. App. 513.
The objection here made to the introduction of the record and proceedings of the justice of the peace in case of Eads v. Spillman, we shall not discuss, since