— This was on an action for the conversion of certain personal property of the plaintiff.
The defendant, in October, 1884, instituted an attachment suit against Joseph Vaughn. Under the writ of attachment the sheriff levied on the property in controversy, which, as all the evidence shows, was the plaintiff’s property. It is claimed by defendant that the property was apparently in the possession of Joseph Vaughn, and was so commingled with other similar property of Joseph Vaughn as to be subject to levy under the writ of attachment without notice by the plaintiff of his ownership, and identification by him of his particular property.
The plaintiff gave no such notice to the sheriff making the levy, either at the time. of the levy or after-wards. The sheriff’s term of office expired while the property was still in his custody, and the property was taken possession of by his successor in office.'
Afterwards the circuit court on motion of the defendant’s counsel (the defendant being plaintiff in the attachment suit) made the following order:
“Now at this day, December 10, 1884, comes the plaintiff herein by his attorney' and informs the court *34that in this action, by virtue of a writ of attachment issued out of the office of the clerk of this court, the sheriff has seized and levied upon certain horses, cattle .and hogs, and also upon corn and other farm products, that the keeping of said live stock is attended with great •expense and that the crops seized and levied upon are liable to great waste and loss, and m oves the court to grant an order to the sheriff to sell the same, and the court being fully advised in the premises sustains the motion, wherefore it is ordered by the court that the sheriff of Clinton county sell according to law said attached property, to-wit: Five head of horses, one hundred and twenty head of hogs, and any and all farm products seized and levied upon that are liable to waste or. loss and report all his proceedings hereunder to the next term of this •court.”
Under this order the sheriff proceeded to sell all the ■property attached, including the property involved in this suit. But before the sale the plaintiff made a claim to the sheriff for his property.
The defendant’s counsel make the point, that the petition alleges a wrongful taking and conversion by the defendant and that the proof shows such acts cominitted by others, on account of which the defendant can be held responsible only on the ground of ratification; and that, hence, there is in this case, not a mere variance, but a failure of proof.
The defendant is not in a position to urge this point, lor the reason that he himself asked instructions based on the theory of ratification. The difference between the court and defendant was not on account of the claim by the latter that the plaintiff could not recover on the theory of ratification by him of the acts of the sheriff and his successor in office, but was as to what was necessary to constitute ratification by the defendant of those acts. The case must be considered by us on the same theory as that on which it was presented to the circuit court. ■ ■
If the property in suit was so intermixed with the *35property of the defendant in the attachment, as is contended by the defendant here, then, since there was no notice given to the officer making the levy of the plaintiff’s 'claim, that officer could not be treated as a trespasser for making the levy and taking the property ; but the sheriff ’ s successor could have been held liable for a conversion of the property, because he sold it after notice of the plaintiff’s claim. Drake on Attachment, sec. 199.
The court instructed the jury to find, in the event of a verdict for plaintiff, the «value of the property on the day of the sale by the sheriff. The question for our determination, therefore, is, is the defendant in this case under the facts equally responsible in law for the sale of the property with the officer who made the sale ?
The only fact on which the defendant can be held responsible for the sale, is the filing of the motion in the circuit court by his attorney asking for the sale of the property. The defendant did not give his attorney directions to file such motion, and until after the sale the defendant did not have personally any notice of the plaintiff’s claim.
I. First, therefore, had the defendant, with notice •of the plaintiff’s claim, directed the filing of the motion for the sale of the property, could he have been held responsible for that sale %
It is true that the court could, under our statutes (R. ¡á., secs. 424, 425), of its own motion have ordered the sale of the property attached, and that the power thus confided to the court is for the benefit of both parties to the suit of attachment, debtor as well as creditor, and that the writ issued by the court is not at all in the nature of a writ of execution, subject to the control of the plaintiff or his attorney. Oeters v. Aehle, 81 Mo. 383. But the order of sale is in no wise for the benefit of the owner of property which has been wrongfully seized as that of the defendant in the attachment ; audit must be necessarily based upon a valid levy. *36The order of sale and the writ issued in pursuance of it furnish no more protection than do a judgment and execution to an officer for selling the property of a stranger that has been taken by him as that of the defendant. In either case after the owner makes his claim the officer proceeds to sell at his peril.
We have thus explained the liability of the officer in order to make clear the equal liability of the defendant here, if he, with notice of the plaintiff ’s claim, had asked the court to make the order of sale. Because the rule on this subject is, “«that the person who agrees to a trespass' after it is done, where it is done to his benefit or for his use, is a trespasser ab initio. His subsequent agreement is equivalent to a previous command.” Perrin v. Claflin, 11 Mo. 14. This rule applies to the case of an official trespasser. Id. The rule is based upon the principle that, by directing the trespass or agreeing to it as committed, the person for whose use it is committed appoints or accepts, as the case may be, the trespasser as his agent to that extent, and becomes a principal in the trespass.
The trespass may be adopted or agreed to in express terms, but this is not necessary. The plaintiff in an attachment, by directing the continued holding of the property seized under the writ, by attending and bidding at the sale, or by receiving and retaining the proceeds of the sale, furnishes facts from which his adoption of the seizure by the officer may be inferred. Freeman on Ex., sec. 273. The fact that the plaintiff procures an order directing the sale of the property has the same effect. Peterson v. Fole, 25 N. W. Rep. 677.
By procuring the order of sale with notice of the plaintiff’s claim the defendant here, who was the plaintiff in the attachment, would have made the sheriff his agent in selling the property ; the sheriff’s act in making the sale would have been his act, the sheriff’s conversion his conversion.
II. And since the defendant, by procuring the order of sale, would have made the sheriff his agent in *37making the sale, what does it matter whether or not the defendant had notice of the plaintiff’s claim at, the time the order was procured, under the facts of this case % The sheriff, before making the sale, received notice of plaintiff’s claim, and since he was acting as the defendant’s agent, notice to him was notice to the defendant. Had the defendant in the first place directed the sheriff o seize the property, notice to the sheriff would have been notice to the defendant, and. so where the defendant procured an order directing the sale of the property.
III. No special direction by the defendant to his attorney was necessary to make the defendant liable for the attorney’s act in procuring the order of sale. Under his general employment the attorney, in procuring the order of sale, was acting as the authorized agent of the defendant, and bound the defendant. Had the defendant’ s attorney directed the sheriff to levy on the property, the defendant would have been bound by the direction as if he had given it in person. Perrin v. Claflin, supra. In making the motion for the sale of the property the defendant’s attorney was acting strictly within the limit of his authority as such attorney.
Under the facts in this case the sheriff, in selling the property in controversy, was guilty of a conversion, and, since this sale was procured by defendant through his d.uly authorized attorney, the defendant was equally guilty of a conversion of the property. The court properly held that the defendant was liable to the extent of the value of the property at the time of the conversion.
Judgment affirmed.
All concur.