Unruh v. Bonham
Unruh v. Bonham
Opinion of the Court
Plaintiff sold and delivered to defendant in September, 1921, a stock of merchandise with store fixtures situated in the town of Mooringsport, for a consideration of $3,100.00. At the time of the sale and delivery of the property to defendant, he paid plaintiff by check the sum of $1,325.00, which was applied on the purchase price. According to the agreement of the parties plaintiff was to have executed his promissorry notes for the balance, payable monthly after the date of the transaction.
Mr. Morehead, a notary public, drew up the notes for defendant to sign and, as agent for plaintiff, presented them to defendant for' his signature, but defendant declined, because of some fancied objection, to sign the notes. Later on, Mr. Morehead lost or misplaced the notes he had filled out for defendant’s signature, fixed up another series of notes and asked defendant to sign them. This the latter also declined to do. During all this time defendant was running the business and disposing of the stock of goods purchased of plaintiff and replenishing his stock with new goods bought from other parties, presumably wholesalers,
After having thus kept the property and run the business for a period of approximately six months without executing any notes in favor of plaintiff as he had agreed to do and without paying her $125.00 monthly on said balance, as he had also contracted to do, plaintiff instituted this suit and, as ancillary thereto, sequestered all the fixtures she had sold defendant, as well as the entire stock of goods of defendant. In the stock were many articles that plaintiff had not sold defendant and on which she, of course, had no vendor’s lien that would entitle her to seize that part of the stock under a writ of sequestration. She did not point out or attempt to identify and segregate the part of the stock she had sold defendant from the rest of the stock.
Defendant filed a lengthy motion to dissolve the writ of sequestration and demanded an exorbitant amount of damages for the alleged wrongful issuance and use of the writ of sequestration. Nothing appears in the record to show that any disposition whatever was ever made of the motion to dissolve. Three days later an answer was filed by defendant.
The case was tried in the District Court, and there was judgment in favor of plaintiff for the full amount prayed for. The writ of sequestration was maintained as against the fixtures seized thereunder and dissolved as to the stock of groceries and other merchandise seized under the same writ. The judgment is silent as to defendant’s claim for damages.
From the judgment of the District Court defendant has appealed.
OPINION.
There is no doubt that the judgment of the lower court is in accord with the preponderance of the testimony. It would serve no useful purpose to review in detail or otherwise the testimony. We have gone over it carefully and we agree with the District Judge, that plaintiff is entitled to the judgment which was rendered by our learned brother of the lower court.
About the only matter which seems to be anywise seriously urged here is that the District Judge should have awarded damages to defendant for the wrongful seizure of his stock of goods.
Ordinarily, that claim would avail; but here there is no adequate proof of the amount of damages sustained by defendant by reason of the wrongful seizure of his goods. He could have bonded the property immediately on its being seized, but he admits that he made no attempt to secure its release on a forthcoming bond. Too, at the
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.