Citation Numbers: 38 Mo. App. 294
Judges: Rombatjek, Udges
Filed Date: 12/17/1889
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/16/2022
delivered the opinion of the court.
The plaintiffs brought an action of replevin against the defendant railway company, and, upon an order of delivery issued by the court, took from the possession •of the railway company four carloads of oak lumber, which they claimed as their property. The plaintiffs thereafter filed their amended petition stating that ■George Bates and Piety Bates claimed title to the lumber, and were necessary parties to the complete determination of the suit, and asked for a summons to be issued against said George and Piety Bates, to Wayne •county, Missouri, where such defendants resided. George and Piety Bates appeared in obedience to such summons, and filed their joint answer, in which, after •denying the allegations of the plaintiffs’ petition, they set up a plea to the jurisdiction of the court. This plea stated, in substance, that the plaintiffs were residents of Wayne county, and the defendants were residents of Wayne county, and that the railway company had an agent in said county on whom service could be had; that the plaintiffs’ supposed cause of action had its origin and continued in Wayne county; and that the plaintiffs instituted their suit in the city of St. Louis in fraud of the statute, and for the purpose of putting the defendants to delay, inconvenience and annoyance. The defendant 'railway company had previously filed an answer containing a similar plea. The plaintiffs demurred to that part of the answer containing a plea to the jurisdiction, and the court sustained the demurrer, and this ruling on the f>art of the court is the first error complained of by the defendants appealing.
We decided in Thompson v. Bronson, 17 Mo. App. 456, that an action for the claim and delivery of specific personal property cannot be brought in the county
By the amendment of 1887, the jurisdiction in replevin suits is governed by the same law, which
It appeared upon the trial that plaintiffs and Piety Bates were creditors of Jones and Mauk, who operated a sawmill near Piedmont, Missouri. The debtors, being in failing circumstances, delivered the lumber in controversy, which was piled up near the railway depot in Piedmont, both to plaintiffs and to Piety Bates, on different occasions, in payment or part payment of their indebtedness. There was evidence tending to show that this delivery was first made to the plaintiffs, and that the plaintiffs at once took possession of the lumber, marked the piles with their own firm name and put an agent in charge. There was no evidence of fraud in the ease. Upon delivery being made, or attempted to be made (subsequently as plaintiffs claim), by Jones’ and Mauk,'or one of them, to Piety Bates, her husband, George, at once had the lumber loaded on the railway company’s cars, and ’had it shipped to St. Louis, where the plaintiffs replevined it. Under this evidence the court instructed the jury, at the instance of both parties, that their respective rights depended upon the priority of the transfer and delivery made to them respectively. This was the only question for the determination of the jury under the evidence, and the jury having found the facts in favor of plaintiff, upon substantial evidence, and under proper instructions, there is nothing for review before us on that branch of the case.
The only other error assigned, namely, that the court excluded proper evidence offered by the defendants, is not borne out by the record. The judgment is affirmed.