Dorton v. Kansas City Railways Co.

224 S.W. 30, 204 Mo. App. 262, 1920 Mo. App. LEXIS 34
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 14, 1920
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 224 S.W. 30 (Dorton v. Kansas City Railways Co.) 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
Dorton v. Kansas City Railways Co., 224 S.W. 30, 204 Mo. App. 262, 1920 Mo. App. LEXIS 34 (Mo. Ct. App. 1920).

Opinion

TRIMBLE, J.

The cause of action involved in this litigation grows out of an assault committed by defendant’s servant upon plaintiff after the.latter paid or tendered his fare and presented himself as a passenger to be carried on defendant’s street car and while he was seeking, and the servant was giving, information relative to the transportation involved and bargained for. Out of the litigation thus arising, two appeals have come, which the parties, by agreement, have consolidated and submitted as one case.

Two trials were had in the circuit court of Jackson county, Missouri, one, the first, was had in Division No. 7, to which the cause was regularly assigned by the Assignment Division, where, at the September, 1917, term, on October 30th, plaintiff obtained a verdict and judgment for $1500. In due time defendant tiled motions for new trial and in arrest which were, by said Division, sustained at the May, 1918, term, to-wit, on¡ June 26th of that year. Upon the sustention of these motions the plaintiff did not appeal but acquiesced therein and manifested his acquiescence by filing in the Assignment Division, at the same term, to-wit, on September 6, 1918, an amended petition together with an acknowledgment of service thereof on defendant.

No formal order to return said cause from Division 7 to the Assignment Division seems to have been entered on the records of said Division No. 7.

After the filing in the Assignment Division of the amended petition, plaintiff, on September 18, 1918, also *264 filed a motion, and notice of motion, to list said cause for trial, said motion carrying defendant’s acknowledgment of service thereof.. The Assignment Division, on. September 26,- 1918, sustained this motion to list the cause for trial, the defendant making no objection thereto.

At the January, 1919, term, to-wit, on February 3, 1919, the defendant filed in the Assignment Division an application for change of venue from the county. Answer and counter affidavits in opposition to such change of venue were, at said term, filed in said Assignment Division by plaintiff on March 8, 1919; and at the March, 19'! 9, term to-wit, on March 17, 1919, the Assignment Division overruled the defendant’s application for change of venue from the county

At said last named term, to-wit, on March 21, 1919, in said Assignment Division, the defendant filed answer to the amended petition, and on the same date said Assignment Division assigned said cause to Division No. 1.

At the same term, and on March 24, 1919, plaintiff filed application for change of venue from the Judge of that Division and on the same day said application was sustained and the cause went on change of venue from Division No. 1 to Division No. 8’; and on that day in Division 8 plaintiff filed reply.

At the same term, on March 25, 1919, said cause was tried in Division 8 resulting in a verdict and judgment for plaintiff in the sum of $4500 actual and $1000 punitive damages.

On March 29, 1919, motions for new trial and in arrest were filed, supported by affidavits, copies of court rules and all record entries in the cause made in the several Divisions.

At said March term and on May 6, 1919, plaintiff filed in Division No. 7 a motion for an order nunc pro tunc.

At the May term, 1919, on May 7, 1919, the hearing on the motion for a mmc pro. tunc order wais had,,at *265 which all the foregoing facts were proved by the records duly offered in evidence, together with Rule 23 of the “Circuit Court Rules.” In addition to this, oral evidence was introduced by deputy clerks and others to the effect that when a case was assigned by the Assignment Division, it was the practice to send to the latter a card notifying it of the assignment, and that in Division 7 when a case was completed in that division the card was marked “Returned to the Assignment Division;” and the deputy clerk in said Division testified that when a -motion for new trial was sustained, it was his custom, without the court’s order, to mark on the card the ease as “Returned to the Assignment Division” and to send the papers and the card to that Division; that, after the motion for new trial-was sustained in this case, that was done. It further appeared that no formal entry, minute or otherwise, was made on the record of Division 7 sending the case back to the Assignment Division, but that the papers and the card went back to the Assignment Division and were never thereafter in Division No. 7. It was further shown that at the time the amended petition was. filed in the Assignment Division the papers were in that Division having been returned from Division No. 7, but the Assignment Card was lost, and it has never been found. The foregoing oral evidence was objected to by defendant.

The defendant then introduced a deputy clerk in another Division, No. 3-, who testified that when the papers in a case were not in actual use in that Division they were returned to the general office; that he never returned a case to the Assignment Division unless the court made an order to that effect and that sometimes eases remained in the Division where tried and were retried therein after sustention of a motion for new trial, without sending them back to the Assignment Division for re-assignment.

The court in Division No. 7 took the motion for an order nunc pro tunc under advisement until June 3', *266 1919, of the May term of that year, when it was sustained, the court finding the various steps were taken in the cause as hereinabove stated, and finding especially that after the motions for new trial and in. arrest had been sustained in Division 7, the plaintiff filed at the same term and on the 6th of September, 1918, an amended petition which was a notice to defendant that plaintiff had abandoned his right to an appeal from the order sustaining said motions and that “thereafter under the rules of the court the only thing that remained to he done was for this court to order the said cause to he returned to the Assignment Division of this court for' further action.” The court further found that the defendant applied for the change of venue and took the .other steps hereinbefore recited, making no objection to. the action of the Assignment Division and participating in the trial of the case the second time, without objection on any ground that the case was not regularly there. The court found that defendant had recognized that the said cause had been returned to said Assignment Division by proper order of this court and the court from said entries and papers doth find that it did, on the 6th day of September, 1919, . . . make an order on the clerk of this division to. return said cause to the Assignment Division and the general docket and that said clerk did so return said cause to said Assignment Division and general docket, and it further appearing that through inadvertence the records of this court were not made to show said order.” The court thereupon entered an order as of September 6, 1918., nunc pro time, showing the formal order'returning said cause to the Assignment Division.

The defendant appealed from'this order, nunc pro tunc, and this is one of the appeals hereinabove referred to.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
224 S.W. 30, 204 Mo. App. 262, 1920 Mo. App. LEXIS 34, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dorton-v-kansas-city-railways-co-moctapp-1920.