Pococke v. Pococke
Pococke v. Pococke
Opinion of the Court
delivered the opinion of the court.
Horace Pococke filed his petition to the April term, 1871, of the St. Louis Circuit Court, stating that William H. Pococke, in his life-time, w7as seized of certain real estate in St. Louis, which was described in the petition; that he died intestate in 1852, leaving surviving him his children, Augusta M. Pococke, Henry C. Pococke, Horace W. Pococke, Leander E. Pococke, Laura Y. Pococke, wife of John D. Elliott, and Caroline M. Pococke ; that Leander E. died, leaving a will wherebj7 he devised to Horace W. Pococke, Laura D. Elliott, Caroline M. Pococke, and the
Henry C. Pococke was appointed guardian ad litem for his children, all of whom were minors, on April 13, 1871, and on February 27, 1872, Michael Kineally was appointed their guardian ad litem. Next day he filed an answer for them. At the February term, 1873, an order appears, under date of March 31, 1873, setting forth that it appears from the sheriff’s report of March 29, 1873, that a tract of land described in the decree made in this cause November 27, 1872, was struck off to a purchaser who refused to comply with the terms of sale, and that the rest of the property was withdrawn from the sale, and, therefore, it was ordered that the sheriff “ do now proceed to sell said real estate described in said decree, according to law,” on the following terms, to wit, one-third cash, the balance in two equal.annual payments, bearing interest at 6 per cent, per annum, and secured by deed of trust.
On May 29, 1873, the sheriff filed his report, setting forth that he had sold the property, and had in his hands, in cash and notes, upwards of $10,000 as the proceeds thereof; and, on June 7, 1873, this report was confirmed.
On April 17,1874, Charles L. Bailey, executor of William S. Davis, filed his petition, setting forth that, on November 27, 1872, the court rendered a decree in partition according to the prayer of the petition; that Henry. C. Pococke was entitled to four twenty-fourths of the proceeds of the sale ; that he received this proportion of the cash payment, and that there was due to him $590.27 out of the second payment, which he had attempted to assign in writing to one
1. The decree of November 27, 1872, does not appear in this record, but an order of sale was subsequently made, -and it appears not to be disputed that there were in the hands of the sheriff, when this petition was filed by Bailey, -credits belonging to Henry C. Pococke, or his assignee, to an amount more than sufficient to satisfy the judgment in question. Hence we need only inquire whether Zelle, the .assignee of those credits, “ at some time -between May 24, 1873, and January 1, 1874,” or Bailey, executor of Davis, the judgment creditor, is entitled to the fund. The sale was made on May 24, 1873.
The appellant says that ‘ ‘ the first material circumstance in chronological order was the decree in the partition suit,” and this, he thinks, was made on November 27, 1872. It is a singular fact that this decree does not appear by the transcript. It is, however, alluded to, and the date above .suggested is assigned to it by way of recital.
The claim of Bailey was, if anything, a right to have his judgment satisfied out of the fund in court. It was not a right to any specific thing or sum, but a lien on a fund or a thing for the satisfaction of his judgment.
When the transcript' of the record of the justice was filed in the Circuit Court, the land in which the judgment debtor had an interest had not been sold. Before execution.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.