I. Stadden Grocery Co. v. Lusk

BROADDUS, J.

In November, 1900, the plaintiff commenced an action against Mrs. Lusk, in aid of which an attachment was issued, under which the sheriff on the seventeenth of said month seized certain property, as the property of the defendant, consisting of dry goods, groceries, drugs, notions, etc., then in a store building at Lone Oak, Missouri; on the nineteenth day of said month the court ordered said goods to be sold and the sheriff to hold the proceeds subject to the further order of the'court. Soon after said order and before a sale thereunder, the said property was destroyed by fire.

At the February term of the circuit court for Bates county, and after the destruction of the goods by fire, the interpleader filed his interplea claiming that he was the owner of them. To this interplea the plaintiff, ' among other things, pleaded as a defense to interpleader’s right to recover, the fact of the destruction of the goods by fire, and that there were no proceeds of the same in existence upon which the interpleader could assert a claim of ownership. Trial was had and the finding was for the interpleader against the plaintiff and his securities on the attachment bond, for “the immediate possession of all the goods, .wares and merchandise seized, attached and levied upon by the sheriff” under said writ of attachment, and it was “further ordered by the court that the said sheriff release and deliver said above described personal property to the said Charles McAninch.” From this judgment the plaintiff appealed.

The only question presented to this court is, was the plaintiff entitled to a judgment under the circumstances? as the goods were not in existence at the time the interplea was filed, and nothing to represent them.

A proceeding by interplea is a separate proceeding *264from the attachment, in which the right to the property is the point at issue. Car Co. v. Barnard, 139 Mo. 142; Giett v. McGannon, 74 Mo. App. 209. And in order to maintain an interplea “the interpleader must show that at the time of the interplea he was the general owner, or had a special interest in the property claimed, and that he was then entitled to the possession. Sawyer Paper Co. v. Mangan, 60 Mo. App. 76. And the interpleader must show his right “to the immediate and exclusive possession.” Hardware Co. v. Hardware Co., 75 Mo. App. 518. Nothing is better settled than the rule laid down in those two cases.

The respondent controverts this position, and refers to numerous decisions to prove that the right of possession is not involved on the trial of an interplea, among which are the following: Beck v. Wisely, 63 Mo. App. 239; Engine & Thresher Co. v. Glazier, 55 Mo. App. 95; Grocer Co. v. Goetz, 57 Mo. App. 8. Unfortunately for interpleader, these cases do not support his contention, but on the contrary, their tendency is to support the rule as announced in Hardware Co. v. Hardware Co., and Sawyer Paper Co. v. Mangan, supra; and in Engine & Thresher Co. case the court expressly holds that if the finding is for the interpleader, it should be in case of sale of the attached property to the effect that the funds arising therefrom should be adjudged to the interpleader, which is the same thing as the property itself, and the judgment in this case is that the interpleader is entitled to the immediate possession of the goods attached.

Under the authorities, and from the very nature of things, we can not see how an interplea could have any effect on something’ that did not exist, and how a sheriff could deliver that which could not be found. The appellate courts of this State hold that “an interplea is in the nature of a replevin engrafted by the statute on the proceeding in attachment.” “It is peculiarly a possessory action, the present right to the possession *265of the property being the principal question in controversy. It involves the exclusive right of the claimant to the immediate possession of the chattel, and the fact of the wrongful detention thereof by the defendant as against the claimant.” Spooner v. Ross, 24 Mo. App. 599; Car Co. v. Barnard, 139 Mo. 142. And an action of replevin can not be maintained when the defendant has neither possession nor control of the property sued for.” Feder v. Abrahams, 28 Mo. App. 454. Por a similar reason, neither can an interplea be maintained. The interpleader has misconceived his remedy.

For the reasons given, the cause is reversed.

All concur.