Danforth v. Lindell Railway Co.

27 S.W. 715, 123 Mo. 196, 1894 Mo. LEXIS 229
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedJune 18, 1894
StatusPublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 27 S.W. 715 (Danforth v. Lindell Railway Co.) 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
Danforth v. Lindell Railway Co., 27 S.W. 715, 123 Mo. 196, 1894 Mo. LEXIS 229 (Mo. 1894).

Opinions

Barclay, J.

— Plaintiffs sue for statutory damages ($5,000) on account of the death of their minor son, occasioned by the alleged negligence of defendant in the operation of its line of street cars in St. Louis.

The answer denies defendant’s negligence and charges plaintiffs and their son with contributory negligence.

That charge was put in issue by a reply.

A trial was had in the circuit court. Upon the submission of plaintiff’s case, the court gave an instruction to the effect that plaintiffs were not entitled to recover under the pleadings and evidence.

Plaintiffs then took a nonsuit with leave,’etc., and, upon the overruling of their motion for a new trial, brought the pending appeal.

It has been prosecuted under section 2253 (R. S. 1889) by filing a certified copy of the judgment and order granting the appeal, supplemented by a printed abstract in lieu of a complete certified transcript.

But the record and abstracts before us show no semblance of an exception or objection, in, the trial court, to its denial of the motion for a new trial (or to set aside the nonsuit).

It is declared by our positive law that “no exception shall be taken in an appeal or writ of error to any proceedings in the circuit court, except such as shall have been expressly decided by such court” (R. S. 1889, sec. 2302).

[198]*198The only alleged errors charged by plaintiffs refer to the selection of the jury, the admission of evidence and the giving of the instruction mentioned. All of these rulings appertain to the trial, and are matters of exception. Unless' they are severally objected or excepted to, at the time, the error (if any there be in such act of the court) can not be made the subject of an objection in the supreme court for the first time.

This rule of procedure is too well established in this state to call for discussion now. Powers v. Allen (1851), 14 Mo. 367; Boyse v. Crickard (1862), 31 Mo. 530; Harrison v. Bartlett (1872), 51 Mo. 170.

It is settled law, furthermore, that an alleged error in giving instructions or upon the evidence or upon any other rulings at the trial, is not reviewable in an appellate court unless assigned as a ground of the motion for new trial. Warner v. Morin (1850), 13 Mo. 455; Brady v. Connelly (1893), 52 Mo. 19; Cowen v. Railroad (1871), 48 Mo. 556; City v. Brewing Co., (1888), 96 Mo. 677.

The ruling on such a motion is not subject to review on appeal or writ of error, unless that ruling was also excepted to. Berry v. Smith (1873) 54 Mo. 148; City of St. Joseph v. Ensworth (1877), 65 Mo. 628; State v. Gilmore (1892), 110 Mo. 1; Taylor v. Switser (1892), 110 Mo. 410.

These decisions are fatal to the success of the present appeal.

All of the above propositions are quite trite, and are settled by long lines of precedents of which but a few have been cited.

They seem to me quite. as applicable to cases brought here upon printed abstracts in the place of full transcripts, as to those in which the complete certified copy of the record of the trial court is before us.

In either case it devolves upon the appellant to [199]*199show, with reasonable certainty, that the appropriate steps necessary, under the statutes and decisions, to a review of any alleged error relied upon for reversal, have been taken.

In the appeal now at bar, the omission of any exception to the overruling of the motion for new trial is obviously not a mere oversight in the preparation of the plaintiffs’ abstract. It is found in what appears to be a printed copy of the bill of exceptions contained in that abstract.

It is, no doubt, proper and right to follow as liberal a construction of the law conferring the right of review as its plain language will bear. But to apply such a construction is a very different matter from an attempt on the part of this court to dispense entirely with the observance of those essential forms which the legislature has considered necessary to the exercise of that right. So long as the law on the subject stands in its present form, our plain duty is to enforce it.

The rightful exercise of the power of this court to revise rulings made during a trial by jury, depends, in part, under our existing law, upon the taking of exceptions to the objectionable rulings when they occur, as well as to the action of the court in refusing to rectify the errors on the motion for new trial.

After the record on the circuit has been closed, and the time to file a bill, preserving the exceptions, has expired, the parties can not then, even by express consent, give validity to such a bill, thereafter filed, for the purpose of obtaining a review upon appeal or writ of error, Dorman v. Coon (1893), 119 Mo. 68 (24 S. W. Rep. 731).

Still less should the mere omission of respondent to interpose in this court a formal, but valid, objection to a review of the merits of a case be held to enlarge the power of the court, so that it might properly review [200]*200rulings that otherwise would not be reviewable because unexcepted to. '

It is the duty of an appellate court in Missouri to sustain the result reached by the trial court, whether that result was induced by correct or erroneous considerations, where sound reasons exist to sustain it. Callaway v. Fash (1872), 50 Mo. 422. If the respondent advances such reasons, well and good; but if he does not, 'and the court is advised of them, are they to be held waived and the judgment reversed because they are not put forward by respondent! Most assuredly not, it seems to me!

In the case before us the defendant insists on an affirmance of the judgment. If an affirmance be proper, for any valid reason disclosed by the record, it is our province to so declare. We are not necessarily restricted to the reasons therefor which respondent may advance.

In the brief of its counsel defendant has objected to the consideration of plaintiffs’ alleged errors, claiming that it does not appear that their motion for a new trial was filed in due time. In examining the printed record we have observed the absence of a proper exception to the ruling on the motion for new trial, already described.

We certainly should not knowingly review the merits of proceedings at a trial, where no exception was made (when it might have been made) to the final circuit ruling upon them.

In my judgment it is immaterial whether such objections to considering the merits are raised here by the adverse party, or not. If they come to our knowledge or notice from an inspection of the record, we can not properly pass them by. We certainly could not rightly reverse a judgment after becoming aware that [201]*201no exception has been preserved to the vital rulings of the trial judge.

There is a great and substantial difference in this regard between reasons to sustain, and reasons to reverse, a judgment.

Many cases can be found in our reports in which judgments have been affirmed because of some omission to- comply with the law respecting the necessary formalities for securing a review of the matters complained of on the appeal. In some of them the appellate court itself appears to have been the first to discover or mention the omission.

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Bluebook (online)
27 S.W. 715, 123 Mo. 196, 1894 Mo. LEXIS 229, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/danforth-v-lindell-railway-co-mo-1894.