Hawk v. Applegate

Smith,, P. J.

This was an action of replevin, brought by the plaintiff against the defendant, in the circuit court of Putnam county, to recover certain specific personal property.

The petition was in the usual form. The answer admitted the possession, but denied the ownership of the property.

It further alleges two separate defenses, one was that the defendant being a constable, having in his hands a number of executions, in favor of the David Bradley Manufacturing Company, against L. K. Flannagan & Co., levied the same upon, and took possession of said personal property thereunder, and that thereupon the plaintiff gave him notice that they claimed said property, and that the defendant then demanded and received of the said manufacturing company a bond of indemnity, conditioned as required by statute, which facts were pleaded in bar of plaintiffs’ action. And the other defense was that the said judgments, upon which the executions issued were for’the unpaid purchase price of the said property of which the plaintiff had notice before their pretended purchase thereof.

*37The replication contained a general denial, and the plea of estoppel, in that said manufacturing company-had informed plaintiffs that it had no claim on said property, and had requested them to purchase the same from Flannagan & Co., and that relying upon such assurances and request, they made purchase thereof.

The evidence at the trial tended to show that Flannagan & Co. were doing a hardware and implement business at Unionville, at the same time plaintiffs were engaged in a similar business there. Flannagan & Co., in August, 1886, proposed to sell out to plaintiffs at a lumping price.

The parties entered into a written agreement to that effect, after which plaintiffs wrote to all the creditors of Flannagan of their proposed purchase, and requested them, if they had any claims against Flannagan & Co., to send the same to them or send some one to represent them, so that they might be provided for. In response to this the creditors came and their claims were all adjusted, except that of the Bradley Manufacturing Company.

They had a contract with Flannagan & Co., whereby the implements not sold in the season of 1886 should be carried over to the next season, and as the selling season for such goods was then over, Flannagan wanted to get the benefit of this time. The Bradley Company sent as their agent in the business one F. H. Smith, when he arrived there was a conversation between him and the plaintiffs herein. They told him of their arrangement to purchase. Smith then had an interview with Flannagan, in the course of which he settled with him and took a note, payable in a short time for the amount of the claim.

About that time he told plaintiffs to go ahead with the trade, that he had settled with Flannagan, and would look to him for the money. This was about September 5, 1886. They then went on with the purchase. Smith helping them take an inventory, and they paid Flannagan twenty-five hundred dollars and executed two notes for *38the balance, one for one thousand dollars and the other for fifteen hundred dollars, and took the goods. There was an arrangement made between Flannagan & Co., and Smith, by which the former was to pay the note given by them to the Bradley Company, and which was deposited in the bank for collection, out of the money he was to get out of the trade with plaintiffs.

Plaintiffs, before they paid their money or gave their notes, wrote Bradley & Co. a letter, inquiring on what terms they would enter into a new contract with them for the goods sold Flannagan, and what discount was allowed, etc., that they understood Smith had failed to make a settlement with him.

To this the reply was, that they had received no report from Smith yet, but had written him for immediate reply.

The testimony discloses that Flannagan did not pay Bradley & Co. all their claim out of the cash proceeds of the sale to plaintiffs.

In the spring of 1887,' Smith again appeared in Unionville, and induced Flannagan, on surrender of the note for all the claim, to give, in lieu thereof, small notes within the jurisdiction of the justice, due at once, and on which suit was immediately brought, judgment obtained, and execution issued and levied on this property. The levy was made on the twenty-sixth of February; claim was made on the first of March.

The constable held the goods after he notified the Bradley Company of the claim five days; then not having received any word from them, he, on the fifth of March, released the goods from the levy and gave them up to plaintiffs, wdio held them until the twelfth of March. On that day, seven days after they were released, the constable received the bond and made a new levy, which on the return on some of the executions is dated the twelfth, and others the fourteenth day, and others the sixteenth day of March, 1887. After this second levy on the goods no claim was made, but *39this suit was commenced to replevy the goods. It appeared in evidence that none of the makers of such alleged bond resided in Putnam county, but were all residents of St. Louis county at that time.

A number of instructions were given and refused, which will be noticed further on.

The jury found for the plaintiff, and, after the usual unsuccessful motions, judgment was rendered and defendant prosecuted his appeal therefrom to this court.

I. The first of the defendant’s three grounds of appeal, is that the circuit court erred in admitting, in evidence over his objections, the statements of F. H. Smith. In this ruling we perceive no error. Smith was the accredited agent of the David Bradley Manufacturing Company, who had been especially interested with the negotiation and transaction of the very business, to which his statements related, and which statements were made while conducting the same. The statements of Smith to which exception is taken were part of the very business in which he was engaged for his principal, and therefore admissible.

The rule is that the declarations of an agent are admissible in evidence against his principal when a part of the transaction he is engaged in for his principal at the time. McDermott v. Railroad, 87 Mo. 285; Gilman v. Railroad, 13 Allen, 444; Story on Agency, secs. 134-135.

The said manufacturing company were written toby plaintiffs before the consummation of the sale, and delivery of the goods by Flannagan & Co. to plaintiffs, that if they had any claims against Flannagan & Co., to send their representative there that some arrangement might be made with it for settlement of the same, and that Smith, representing said manufacturing company, appeared upon the scene, when the plaintiffs informed him that they were about purchasing the Flannagan & Co. stock of goods, and requested to know of him *40whether there was anything back on the same, they would like to arrange it with him, replied, “I will go and see Flannagan.’’ After seeing Flannagan he returned and said, “We have settled with Flannagan for the goods, go ahead and buy them.” There were, of course, a number of conversations between Smith and the plaintiffs during the various steps taken in respect to the negotiation of the sale of the goods, and the settlement of the claim with which Smith was entrusted, but they all relate to the one transaction of which they were a part, and must fall within the principle of the rule we have stated.

II. The defendant contends that the circuit court erred in instructing the jury for the plaintiff, that the taking of the bond of indemnity by him was no defense.

The defendant made the levy on the property, and took and approved the indemnity bond on the same day.

The plaintiffs instead of making claim thereto, as provided by section 3023, Revised Statutes, brought this suit. They had two concurrent rights, after the levy, one was to reclaim the property by an action of replevin, and the other was to give the notice provided by statute.

These were personal privileges — they could elect which remedy they would pursue. If they desired to regain possession of their property, they could do so by resort to replevin, on the other hand, if they did not so desire its possession, they could give the statutory notice, and if the indemnifying bond was given as required by said section 3020, let the property sell, and then sue on the bond to recover the damages they had sustained.

The manufacturing company could not deprive the plaintiffs of the right to exercise their choice of remedies, by giving to defendant a bond of indemnity, when there was no statutory claim made to the property after the levy. This right is conferred upon the party in possession of the property, and not upon him who is questioning his title and causing it, the property, to be *41seized under execution. The fact that the constable may know that the person in possession of the property levied on claims an ownership in it, for that (the law presumes) does not justify him in voluntarily demanding of the execution creditor a bond of indemnity, or, if so, the same would not have the effect to authorize the seizure and detention of the property of the plaintiffs, or to shield him from the legal consequences of the same in an action of this kind. What proceedings may have taken place, as to other and prior levies, was wholly immaterial in this case.

The instruction was proper enough.

III. The defendant complains that the circuit court further erred in giving the plaintiffs’ fifth instruction, which told the jury that although the manufacturing company sold the goods in controversy to Flannagan & Co., who may not have paid therefor, and that the judgments upon which the executions were issued, under which the same were seized, were rendered for such unpaid purchase money, yet if, before plaintiffs completed their purchase, plaintiffs wrote to said company of their intention so to do, and requested it to send some one to represent it in reference to any claim it might have against Flannagan & Co., and that in response thereto it did send Smith as its agent for such purpose, and that he, on being informed of the intention of the plaintiff to purchase said goods, then informed them, or any of them, that his company had settled with Flannagan & Co. for such goods, and looked to him for payment, making no objection to the purchase, but assisting plaintiffs in making an inventory, and that plaintiffs thereafter, relying on such statements, completed the purchase of the goods and paid for them in cash and notes, the jury should find for the plaintiffs.

Instruction number one asked by the defendant, and refused by the court in effect, told the jury that even if they did find the facts hypothecated in the preceding instruction, they should find for the defendant, if they *42found further that the said judgments, on which the executions were issued and levied, were for the indebtedness for the purchase of said goods, and that the plaintiffs had knowledge of this before the purchase of said goods, and payment therefor, and that the said indebtedness had not been paid, for then the said levy and possession of defendant was lawful.

The court appended to this instruction the proviso “ unless they further believed that the said manufacturing company, by its authorized agent, informed plaintiffs it had no claim upon the goods and induced plaintiffs to purchase them, Upon the assurance it would look to Plannagan & Co. for its pay,” and, thus amended, it was given. These two instructions by this modification of the court were brought into exact harmony, and as the estoppel was pleaded, and there was evidence adduced to support this theory, we cannot say this action of the court, in the giving of the one, or the refusing of the other, was erroneous.

We take it that while personal property under section 2353, Revised Statutes, is subject to execution on a judgment against the purchaser for the price thereof, except in the hands of an innocent purchaser for value, without notice of such prior claim, that where one who has notice of such prior claim desires to buy such property, and is informed by the execution creditor that arrangements have been made whereby he would look to the original purchaser and not to the property for such purchase money, and upon that the faith of such assurances, the property is bought and paid for, the buyer’s position is not different from that of an innocent purchaser for value without notice — this is so upon principle.

Perceiving no error in the record prejudicial to the defendant, the judgment; will be aifirmed.

All concur.