Crouse v. Greensfelder

120 S.W. 666, 140 Mo. App. 545, 1909 Mo. App. LEXIS 155
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 22, 1909
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 120 S.W. 666 (Crouse v. Greensfelder) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Crouse v. Greensfelder, 120 S.W. 666, 140 Mo. App. 545, 1909 Mo. App. LEXIS 155 (Mo. Ct. App. 1909).

Opinion

REYNOLDS, P. J.

(after stating the facts).— Counsel for appellant relies on section 1674, Revised Statutes 1899, which by the fourth subdivision confers upon the circuit courts appellate jurisdiction “from the judgments and orders of county courts, probate courts and justices of the peace, in all cases not ex[548]*548pressly prohibited by law, and shall possess a superintending control over them,' and a general control over executors, administrators, guardians, curators, minors, idiots, lunatics and persons of unsound mind.” Referring to this section, this court, in Morris v. Morris, 128 Mo. App. 673, in which case a like right of appeal was attempted to be founded upon this same section, has said: “The superintending control conferred by this section does not embrace an appeal from a decision of the probate court to the circuit court. It can only be exercised by an original writ issuing out of the circuit court, directed to the probate court, as the writ of certiorari, mandamus or prohibition. We think appellant has misconceived his remedy.” The appeal was not from an adjudication of the fact of lunacy, a proceeding having been unsuccessfully instituted to declare a- person insane — the verdict being in favor of the sanity of the party, — and the costs were taxed against the party who instituted the proceeding. It was from the taxation of these costs, that the appeal was taken. It will be observed that in this opinion of the learned judge, no notice-is taken of the first clause of subdivision 4, of section 1674, namely, “appellate jurisdiction from the judgments and orders of county.courts, probate courts and justices of the peace, in all cases not expressly prohibited by law,” the judge basing his conclusion aloné on the second clause of this subdivision which gives superintending control, and he holds that that superintending control is not to be exercised through an appeal. We are therefore, in the case at bar, brought to consider the effect of the first clause of this subdivision, granting a right of appeal in all cases in which the appeal “is not expressly prohibited by law.”

What is now subdivision 4, of section 1674, R. S. 1899, has appeared in our statutes in substantially the same words for many years. In the Revised Statutes of 1855, it appears as the fourth clause of the eighth [549]*549section of the forty-seventh chapter of that revision in this language, “appellate jurisdiction from the judgments and orders of county courts and justices of the peace, in all cases not expressly prohibited by law, and shall possess a superintending control over them.” Prior to 1875, when our present constitution was adopted, probate jurisdiction and jurisdiction of proceedings under an inquisition of lunacy, were, by law, vested in the county courts, the few probate courts that we then had existing under special acts, local in their application. Construing this section, in the revision of 1855, the Supreme Court, in Hall v. County Court of Audrain County, 27 Mo. 829, held that under it, the right of appeal lay to the Supreme Court from an order of a county court removing the guardian of an insane person. The right of appeal on this phase of the case was challenged. Judge Righakdson, who delivered the opinion, remarked, after quoting this fourth subdivision of section 8, chapter 47, Revised Statutes 1855, that the court had not been referred to any provision of the statute which prohibits an appeal in a case like the one then before the court. Referring to the fifteenth section of the chapter, which defines the exclusive original jurisdiction of the county courts and which enumerates, among other subjects, the power of appointing and displacing the guardians of orphans, minors and persons of unsound mind and closes with the sweeping declaration of the right of appeal in all cases to the circuit court in such manner as may be provided by law, the learned judge holds that while the general right of appeal is given, the manner is not provided, nor the operation of the appeal, nor the manner of the trial of the case in the circuit court on appeal. The absence of all of which, however, the court holds does not affect the right of appeal. The right of appeal on the verdict establishing insanity was not clearly in decision.

In the Matter of Marquis, 85 Mo. 615, the relator filed an information in the probate court of Howard [550]*550county, alleging that his father was a person of unsound mind and praying that an inquiry into that be had. The probate court made an order finding him to be a person of unsound mind and incapable of attending to his business. The court entered judgment accordingly and appointed a guardian of his person and estate. At the next regular term of the court, Marquis appeared and moved the court to set aside the judgment, alleging various grounds, among others, that he was not of unsound mind and that the proceeding had been instituted against him without his knowledge and without notice, and that he was in proper condition to be brought into court. The motion was sustained, whereupon the guardian appealed to the circuit court, where the judgment of the probate court was affirmed. Prom that judgment the guardian appealed to the Supreme Court. The Supreme Court, in an opinion delivered. by Judge Norton, affirmed the judgments of the circuit and probate courts. No question appears to have been made in either court as to the right of appeal, but while no doubt whatever is suggested as to jurisdiction in the matter on appeal or as to the jurisdiction of the circuit court to entertain the appeal, that question was not in decision.

In the case of Coleman v. Farrar, 112 Mo. 54, the question was over the right of appeal from orders approving or disapproving the settlements of a guardian of a person adjudged to have been of unsound mind. In this case Judge Gantt, who delivered the opinion of the court in banc, after holding that even if an appeal was not allowed, it Avould not affect the jurisdiction of the probate court in the matter of such settlements, uses this language at page 72: “But there is a spirit pervading our statutes to allow appeals from all final judgments of courts, whether of limited or general jurisdiction. As before said, our present uniform system of probate courts was provided for in the Constitution of 1875, and the statute of 1877, which was enacted [551]*551to carry out tbe Constitution. Section 1102, Revised Statutes 1879, provides that ‘the circuit courts . . . shall have appellate jurisdiction from the judgments and orders of county courts, probate courts', and justices of the peace, in all cases not expressly prohibited by law, and shall possess a superintending control over them.’ If we are correct in holding that the statute contemplated a final judgment and settlement of the guardian’s accounts, it 'seems clear that an appeal lies to the circuit court, under section 1102, supra.” This section, 1102, R. S. 1879, is section 1674, of the Revised Statutes of 1899. Here again there is no direct decision of the question before us.

Our Supreme Court, in the Marquis case, supra, l. c. 617, citing Dutcher v. Hill, 29 Mo. 271, says that, “The proceedings under the law concerning insane persons are not like a final judgment, which' is unalterable after the end of the term at which it was rendered. They are in fieri, like a cause pending, and irregularities in them or defects of the record may be obviated at any time so long as the lunatic is under the control of the guardian appointed for him.

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Bluebook (online)
120 S.W. 666, 140 Mo. App. 545, 1909 Mo. App. LEXIS 155, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/crouse-v-greensfelder-moctapp-1909.