69 Mo. App. 368 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1897
On January 15, 1896, an execution was issued out of the clerk’s office of the Pike county circuit court in favor of Lemuel J. Williamson, and against Oeorge W. Wylie, on a judgment for $1,198.38 and costs, rendered March 6,1894. The sheriff, on the .sixteenth day of January, 1896, levied this execution upon “sixteen head of fat cattle,” as the property of the defendant Wylie. On the next day, January 17, the Bank of Curryville gave the sheriff the following notice:
“Bowling Oreen, Jan. 17th, A. D. 1896.
"To William L. Dougherty, Sheriff of Pike County, Missouri:
“You are hereby notieied, that the Bank of Curryville, located at Curryville, Pike county, Missouri, is the owner of the 16 head of fat cattle by virtue of a chattel mortgage given by one Oeo. W. Wylie, to said bank to secure an indebtedness that said Wylie owed said bank, and said chattel mortgage is recorded in the*371 records of Pike county, Missouri, at volume 10, page 36; the said 16 head of fat cattle that the said bank is owner of, were levied upon by you as the property of Creo. W. Wylie on the 16th day of January, A. D. 1896. That said levy was made by you under and by virtue of an execution issued by the clerk of the circuit court of Pike county, Missouri, on the 14th day of January, A. D. 1896, on a judgment in favor of Lemuel J. Williamson against Geo. W. Wylie. The said bank is the absolute owner of the said 16 head of fat cattle by virtue of other chattel mortgages recorded in the records of Pike county, Missouri, given by said Wylie to said bank for other indebtedness that is set out in the above and including the above indebtedness. Said bank says that none of said indebtedness from said Wylie has been paid by said Wylie or anyone for him to said bank and the whole is now past due.
“You abe hebeby notieied to release said 16 head of fat cattle from said levy.
“Bank of Cubbyville,
“By J. W. Hawkins,
“As cashier of the Bank of Curryville.”
On the followihg day the plaintiff in the execution, Williamson, gave the sheriff an indemnifying bond, and on June 22, 1896, the cattle were sold under an order of the court made in vacation. The net proceeds of the sale was $962.65. The sheriff’s return to the execution stated all the foregoing facts. The sheriff, with his return, filed the claim of the bank, and Williamson’s indemnifying bond on February 24,1896, and had the $962.65 in court. On the same day appellant, Williamson, filed in court his answer to the claim of the bank, which was first a general denial, and, second, fraud and collusion, on the part of Wylie and the cashier of the Bank of Curryville to cheat and defraud him (Williamson). A trial was had of the rights of
The claimant produced in evidence a note made payable to the Curryville bank and executed by Wylie. This note was dated August 22, 1895, was due for $1,500, and due one day after date. To secure this note claimant read in evidence a chattel mortgage on the following described property: “Sixteen feeding steers, four yearling steers, two yearling heifers, one white-faced bull, eleven milch cows, fourteen steer calves, two heifer calves, one bay horse, sixteen hands high, eight years old, one bay horse, fifteen hands high, five years old, one gray horse, sixteen hands high, five years old, one bay mare with mule colt, sixteen hands high, eight years old, one black mare mule, fourteen hands high, two years old, one mouse colored mule, fourteen, hands high, two years old, three mare mules, one year old; six hundred bushels of oats in bin and seventy acres of growing corn.” This mortgage was duly acknowledged and recorded on the day of its date, August 22, 1895. Testimony was introduced by the claimant, which identified the sixteen head of “fat cattle” levied on by the sheriff as' the identical “16 head of feeding steers” described in the mortgage. Appellant introduced no testimony. Motions in arresc of judgment and for new trial were filed in due time, and were by the court overruled. Hence this appeal.
In State ex rel. Redman v. Durant, 53 Mo. App. 493, Biggs, Judge, in the course of his opinion, uses the following’ language: “Whether this summary remedy is available when the claimant fails to give a forthcoming bond, as he may do under section 4927, is a question on which.the members of the court are not in accord.”
The case of Houx et al. v. Shaw et al., 18 Mo. App. 45, was a case in which both an indemnity bond, by plaintiff in the execution, and a forthcoming bond by the claimant were given.
In Lloyd v. Tracy, 53 Mo. App. loc. cit. 180, Judge Rombauer in the course of his opinion refers to Stevens v. Springer, but he declined to decide the point, because not directly involved in the case.
The question presented here has not been discussed in any opinion of the Kansas City court of appeals, in this court, or by the supreme court, that we have been able to find. In Stevens v. Springer, the question is not discussed, the question of jurisdiction was not raised, so far as we are able to ascertain from the opinion and briefs of counsel filed in the case; counsel and court seemed to have taken it for granted that the trial of the rights of property was rightfully had' under section 2367, Revised Statutes, 1879 (now sec. 4928, R. S. 1889). Section 4928 requires the officer to return the claims, and such bond or bonds as shall have been taken by him, to the court, to which the execution may be returnable, on or before
The judgment that the court may render, under section 4928, is confined to the property levied upon, and the costs. Its whole scope and object is to try the rights of property, and to make orders, and render judgments concerning it. If, after taking an indemnifying bond, on the failure of the claimant to give a delivery bond, the officer gives the statutory notice, and sells under the execution, and pays the proceeds to the execution creditor, as he is bound to do, we are
Finding no reversible error in the record, the judgment is affirmed. It is so ordered.