Becher v. Deuser

69 S.W. 363, 169 Mo. 159, 1902 Mo. LEXIS 261
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedJune 18, 1902
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 69 S.W. 363 (Becher v. Deuser) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Becher v. Deuser, 69 S.W. 363, 169 Mo. 159, 1902 Mo. LEXIS 261 (Mo. 1902).

Opinion

MARSHALL, J.

— This is an appeal by the plaintiff from a refusal of the circuit court to amend a judgment in ejectment at a term subsequent to that at which the judgment was rendered.

The petition was in the usual form, and the property described as follows: “that certain piece or parcel of land in the-city of St. Louis, fronting on Ivory avenue, in- block No. 3143, of said city, and being the southern one foot, six and one-half inches of lot- number five, of block number thirty-three, of survey number three of Oarondelet, by John O. Ivory.” The answer was a general denial.

[161]*161The case came on for trial at the October term, 1899, on November 22, 1899. The defendant did not appear. The plaintiff adduced his evidence and the court entered a judgment for the plaintiff describing the premises as follows: “A part of lot 5 of block 33, of survey No. 3, of Oarondelet, by John 0. Ivory, and in City Block No. 3143, beginning at the intersection of the south line of said lot, with the east line of Ivory avenue,” * * * * [These asterisks do not appear in the judgment but are placed there herein to pointedly call attention to the alleged clerical error in the judgment which it is sought to correct, nunc pro tunc, by inserting a call in the description which it is claimed was omitted by the misprision of the clerk] “one foot, six and one-half inches to a point, thence in a direct line towards the south line of said lot to a point in said south line sixty-one feet east of its intersection with said line of Ivory avenue, thence westwardly along said south line sixty-one feet to the point of beginning.”

On the twenty-second of March, 1900, at the February term, 1900, the plaintiff moved to have the judgment amended, nunc pro tunc, by inserting at the place, in the judgment marked with asterisks, the words, “thence northwardly along the east line of Ivory avenue.”

In support of this motion the plaintiff proved, orally, by the clerk of the court, that he entered the judgment from a memorandum which the plaintiff’s attorney had furnished him for the judgment, and which, as is customary, he placed with the papers in the case, but which he had been unable to find, and that he endeavored to follow the memorandum. Counsel for plaintiff then testified orally that at the close of the trial, with a plat before him, he prepared the memorandum for the judgment, and gave it to the clerk, and that it was exactly as the judgment was entered, with the exception that it contained the words sought by this motion to have inserted at the place whei'e the asterisks appear, to-wit, “thence northwardly along [162]*162the east line of Ivory avenue.” Plaintiff then showed hy the notes of the official stenographer of the court that at the close of the plaintiff’s case the court said: “You may take judgment

for possession of the property, one foot six and one-half inches, running to a point in the south line of lot 6, sixty-one feet from the front of the lot.”

Upon this showing the circuit court overruled the motion to amend the judgment and the plaintiff appealed.

I.

The plaintiff asked in his petition to recover a parallelogram, or rather, a rectangle, fronting one foot six and one-half inches on the east side of Ivory avenue, and being the southern one foot six and one-half inches of lot five of block thirty-three of survey number three of Oarondelet by John 0. Ivory. The depth of the lot is not given, and could only be ascertained by. reference to the survey and plat

The judgment as entered follows the description of the petition as to the lot, block and survey number, and then instead of following the further description in the petition, undertakes to describe the land hy metes and bounds, with the result that it amounts to absolutely nothing, because it starts at the intersection of the south line of lot five with the east line of Ivory avenue, then says, “one foot six and one-half inches to a point,” without saying whether that course was north, south, east or west from the initial point, and then describes the next course as “thence in a direct line towards the south line of said lot to a point in said south line sixty-one feet east of its intersection with said Ivory avenue, thence westwardly along said south line sixty-one feet to the point of beginning.” This description, therefore, starts at the intersection of the south line of lot five with the east line of Ivory .avenue, runs east to a point in the south line of lot five, distant sixty-one feet from the point of intersection, the initial point, [163]*163and then back along the same line to the place of beginning. The call, “one foot six and one-half inches to a point,” is, therefore, perfectly meaningless, and the effect of the judgment is to give the plaintiff judgment for a line of no width extending eastwardly sixty-one feet.

The proposed amendment would give the plaintiff a triangle fronting one foot, six and one-half inches on the east line of Ivory avenue, and extending eastwardly to a point in the south line of lot five.

Such a judgment as the stenographer’s notes show the court directed to be entered would be almost as meaningless and useless as the judgment that was actually entered. Eor it simply describes the property as “one foot six and onp-half inches running to a point in the south line of lot 6, sixty-one feet from the front of the lot.” It will be observed that no initial point is described; the one foot six and one-half inches are not described as fronting on the east line of Ivory avenue, and in fact are not so described as to make its location ascertainable; lot five is nowhere mentioned in the memorandum, but on the contrary, the only course' given in the stenographer’s notes is “running to a point in the south line of lot 6, sixty-oné feet from the front of the lot.” It is not stated where it is to run from or where it is to go from the point to which it is to go. It is stated that it is to run to a point in the south line of lot six, sixty-one feet from the front of the lot, when lot six is nowhere mentioned in the petition and there is nothing in the record to show where lot six is located, whether north or south of lot five.

The stenographer’s memorandum, even if it was such a paper as would afford the basis for an amendment nunc pro tuno,, would not help the plaintiff at all, but, if true, would show that the motion to amend ought not to- be sustained, because it would call for some indefinite, unascertainalóle property, in lot six, while the petition only asks for the possession of a rectangle fronting one foot six and one-half inches on the [164]*164east line of Ivory avenue, being the southern part of lot five» The judgment if- entered according to the stenographer’s notes would therefore be for property not in suit in this case.

But the stenographer’s notes do not constitute a paper or file in the cause which can be made the basis of an amendment of a judgment nunc pro tunc. The plaintiff relies upon the case of Sullivan v. Eddy, 154 Ill. 199, as authority for his contention that the stenographer’s notes do afford such a basis.

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Bluebook (online)
69 S.W. 363, 169 Mo. 159, 1902 Mo. LEXIS 261, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/becher-v-deuser-mo-1902.