41 Mo. App. 236 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1890
Plaintiff’s counsel states this case as follows:
Plaintiff brought suit in the circuit court of Bates county, Missouri, by attachment,- and levied upon the goods and lands of defendants found in said county. The ground of attachment alleged by the plaintiff is found in the twelfth subdivision of section 398 of the Revised Statutes of Missouri, 1879. The facts constituting the cause of action were fully set out in the petition and affidavit of the plaintiff. It was therein alleged, in substance, that defendant Anna Dinan, for the purpose of cheating and defrauding plaintiff, and obtaining money from him, did, about the thirty-first day of August, 1889, in the absence of her husband, and without his consent or knowledge, steal twenty-eight head of cattle in Bates county, Missouri, from August
Defendants then moved to quash the writ and the return thereof on the ground that the defendant Anna Dinan was a married woman, and, this being an action at law, it cannot be maintained against her. And, also, that the defendant Anna Dinan, being under coverture, her contract for the sale of the cattle to plaintiff was void, and the damages connected therewith could not be recovered, either against her or her husband. The court sustained the motion to quash, and rendered a judgment thereon against plaintiff, ordering and
I. It is clear that this writ of error must be dismissed, as there is no authority, under the law, for a writ of error in a controversy of this character. This is an effort to have this court review, on a writ of error, the order and judgment of the circuit court sustaining a motion to quash an attachment, said motion filed as provided by section 445, Revised Statutes, 1879. Under that statute an attachment writ may be quashed, and the same dissolved, for three reasons therein mentioned, first of which is where the affidavit shall be adjudged insufficient in law to warrant the attachment. It was for this reason the court below dissolved the attachment and quashed the writ herein. And it was, too, from this judgment or order, and this alone, that plaintiff has sued out the writ of error. The judgment on the motion to quash was not the final disposition of the entire case in the court below; was not a final judgment of the cause, but simply a judgment on the motion to quash the attachment leaving the main case standing as before, a suit for damages without the auxiliary attachment. It has been long and well understood in
But even did such motion to quash come within the spirit and intent of section 439, and a right for an appeal thereby provided, yet plaintiff is not justified in bringing the case here by writ of error. That statute authorizes only an appeal, which under the law must be made at “the term at which the judgment or decision appealed from was rendered.” R. S. 1879, sec. 3712. It was not intended by said section 439 to permit a writ of error which may be sued out at any time within three years after such judgment or decision appealed from. R. S. 1879, sec. 3745. This point has been expressly so decided in this state. Duncan v. Forgey, 25 Mo. App. 310; Young v. Hudson, Mo. Sup. Ct. (not yet reported).
II. Counsel for plaintiff request that, notwithstanding this writ of error be dismissed, we examine into the issues of the main case, as they may be hereafter presented, and give our opinion thereon and thereby facilitate the trial of the cause on its merits.
The writ of error herein is dismissed.