Smith ex rel. Cabiness v. White

Ellison, J.

There was a demurrer to the petition in this cause, which, being sustained, plaintiff refused to amend and appealed to this court.

The action is based on an indemnifying bond given to a constable by a plaintiff in an execution as provided in section 6311, Revised Statutes, 1889. The constable levied upon personal' property as belonging to the defendant in the execution, when the plaintiff interposed her claim to the property. This claim, as set out in the petition, was informal, in that it omitted some material matters required by the statute. Prom this it is urged in support of the demurrer that the constable had no right to take the bond, and that, having taken it on such informal claim, the obligors (defendants) are not liable. The case involves a construction of section 6311. It cannot properly be inferred from that section that the claim made by the claimants shall be made in the nianner and in the terms of the statute in order to make valid a bond which may be given in response to such informal claim. If the claim be insufficient under the terms of the statute, but the constable and the plaintiff in the execution nevertheless act upon such informal claim, the constable demanding and the plaintiff furnishing the indemnifying bond, such bond is valid against the plaintiff and his sureties, and will discharge the officer from liability. State to use v. Watson, 30 Mo. 122. That case involved a local statute, but in all substantial respects like the present statute. But such informal or insufficient claim is not enough to *407authorize or justify the oflicer in requiring or demanding of the plaintiff a bond, nor to compel the plaintiff to furnish the bond, if demanded of him by the constable, nor would the officer be justified in releasing the property if plaintiff should refuse to give a bond on such insufficient claim. Bradley v. Holloway, 28 Mo. 150; State ex rel. v. Rucker, 19 Mo. App. 587. I think ' there is no doubt but the foregoing is what those cases meant to decide.

I am not able to understand why it should be considered (as said by-the St. Louis Court of Appeals in Eichelmann v. Weiss, 7 Mo. App. 87, and State to use v. Schmidt, 20 Mo. App. 50) that State v. Watson, supra, overrules Bradley v. Holloway. The two cases seem to be entirely consistent; one decides the bond cannot be required in response to an informal claim, and the other that, though it cannot be required, yet, if it should be given, it is valid and binding. That the supreme court has not considered Bradley v. Holloway overruled by State v. Watson is evident from the fact that the former has since been frequently cited by that court. It is cited in the case immediately following the Watson case, and by the same judge who wrote the Watson case. In Bradley v. Holloway there was an insufficient claim which the constable did not act upon, and • the plaintiff did not give a. bond: In State v. Watson there was an insufficient claim which the constable and the plaintiff did act upon, the plaintiff giving a bond, which was declared to be valid and to release the officer. So, since from the petition in this case it appears that an idemnifying bond was in fact given by the -plaintiff in the execution, though upon an insufficient (statutory) claim, yet it is a valid bond, and it and the facts upon which it is based are sufficiently pleaded. We rule this point of defendants’ demurrer against them.

II. The petition discloses that the plaintiff herein claimed to be the owner of only a portion of the property levied upon, the remainder belonging to Lizzie *408Collier. It also shows that the bond was executed for the benefit of both plaintiff and said Lizzie. Prom this it is contended that there-was a defect of parties; that said Lizzie should either have been joined as a plaintiff or made a defendant. Plaintiff’s interest does not appear to be joint with Lizzie’s. If their interests were in fact, joint, it does not appear from the petition, but the contrary seems clearly inferrable. If their interests were separate, one owning one part of the property and the other the remaining part, they each have a separate action on the bond, notwithstanding it be executed to the constable for the benefit of both. State to use v. Hesselmeyer, 34 Mo. 76; State to use v. Leutzinger, 41 Mo. 498; Johnson v. True, 25 Mo. App. 451. And this is true of a bond executed directly to the beneficiaries where their interests are separate and based upon separate considerations. Cross v. Williams, 72 Mo. 577. We also rule this point against defendants.

It is lastly contended that there was no final judgment rendered upon which to base an appeal. The judgment is somewhat awkward, but it is sufficient to accomplish the purpose for which it was intended.

Reversed and remanded.

All concur.