Engler v. Knoblaugh

110 S.W. 16, 131 Mo. App. 481, 1908 Mo. App. LEXIS 466
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 28, 1908
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 110 S.W. 16 (Engler v. Knoblaugh) 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
Engler v. Knoblaugh, 110 S.W. 16, 131 Mo. App. 481, 1908 Mo. App. LEXIS 466 (Mo. Ct. App. 1908).

Opinion

GOODE, J.

This action is based on section 9466 of the Revised Statutes of 1899. Said section provides for a penalty of five dollars a day to be recovered in an action of debt, by any party in whose favor judgment has been given for a private road over the land of another, from the owner of the land, for each day the road remains unopened after the date it is ordered opened. The penalties sued for amount to $255 for the period the road was kept closed subsequent to December 6, 1906, the date on which it was to be opened according to the order of the court, to the date of the filing of the petition in the present action, February 6, 1907. The like penalty per diem is prayed for each day after the last date until defendant opens the road. In a proceeding instituted by appellant in the county court of Lawrence county, for the establishment of a private [484]*484road over the land of respondent, the commissioners appointed to assess damages reported respondent’s damages at $50, without charging any part of the sum to fencing respondent might he compelled to build in consequence of the opening of the road. In this respect the report did not conform to section 9461 of the statutes, which regulates the reports of commissioners in such cases. Respondent was unwilling to accept said sum in full for the damages he would sustain from opening the road. He filed no written objection or exception to .the report of the commissioners, but objected orally in open court. A colloquy regarding his objection ensued between him and the judges of the county court, and it was finally agreed he would not appeal from an order to open the road, if the order allowed him the fifty dollars assessed by the commissioners as damages and contained a condition that appellant should construct and forever maintain the fencing made necessary by the road. The county court rendered judgment for the opening of the road on those conditions; but in entering the judgment the clerk omitted from the entry part of it i. e., the condition annexed by the court that appellant should build and maintain whatever fencing was made necessary. The entry was also erroneous in reciting the commissioners in their ■ report had found respondent’s damages as follows:

“That the damages of the owner of said land, viz: John J. Knoblaugh, on account of the establishment of said road and the erection of a three-wire fence on the east side of said road, one being now erected on the west side, will be the sum of fifty dollars, and the said John Engler having paid said sum of fifty dollars, to the treasurer of Lawrence county for the use of the owner of said land,” etc.

In truth the commissioners reported nothing about the fencing and assessed nothing in respondent’s favor for the erection of a fence; but the whole sum allowed [485]*485as damages was for the strip of land one rod wide and a quarter of a mile long which would be taken for the road. After the filing of the report appellant deposited fifty dollars with the clerk. He was not present in person or by attorney when the judgment to open the road was given, and is not shown to have known of the condition annexed to the judgment regarding the fencing. His attorney, who lived elsewhere, drove to the county seat with a form for the entry of the judgment a day or two after it was rendered, gave the form to the clerk of the county court and said official wrote the record in accordance with the form. Appellant’s attorney acted innocently in furnishing a form for the entry which showed a judgment different from the one actually rendered, as he was unaware any condition was attached to the opening of the road except the payment by his client of the damages assessed by the- commissioners. In defense of the present action the facts are set up in the answer substantially as we have stated them, except fraud Is charged against appellant in procuring the erroneous entry by the clerk. Respondent’s conduct in not opening the road as ordered is explained and sought to be justified on the ground no such judgment as the record showed was given against him, which false judgment appéllant, nevertheless, insisted on as binding respondent to open the road through the latter’s farm and as not binding appellant to build and maintain the fencing which would be required to inclose the farm. It should be stated the judgment of the county court allowed respondent four months after its date in which to open the road.- The answer says the error in the record did not become known to respondent until after he had accepted the damages awarded and when it was too late to have the same corrected by the county court or to take an appeal, and that it would be unconscionable and inequitable to permit appellant, in view’ of the foregoing facts, to recover [486]*486the penalties sued for, and the prayer of respondent is appellant be enjoined and restrained from suing for the penalties given by the statute for failure to open the road and said judgment be vacated, set aside and for naught held. Respondent tendered and offered to pay into court the sum of fifty dollars which, had been paid previously by appellant to the clerk and received by respondent as damages. The evidence- conclusively proves the judgment entered by the clerk of the county court was not the one rendered by the court. Each of the judges of said court so testified as did other -fitnesses; and all the witnesses agreed an order or condition that appellant should build and forever maintain the fencing needed to inclose respondent’s land, was part of the judgment. On proof of these facts the circuit court treated the answer as in the nature of a cross-bill in equity, found its allegations to be substantially true, and that thereafter appellant had induced the clerk of the county court to enter an entirely diffei’ent judgment from the one pronounced, by which erroneous entry it was made to appear said court had adjudged respondent should' erect the fencing; that the said mistake in entering a judgment different from the one pronounced, was injurious to respondent and subjected him to harassing suits and penalties. The learned circuit judge further found respondent was ignorant of the error in the entry of the judgment until it was too late to correct the same by motion, appeal or otherwise, and had no. remedy at law by which to protect himself against the consequences of the false record. Wherefore the court adjudged and decreed appellant be prohibited from prosecuting the present action for penalties against respondent, and as the latter had paid into court the damages accepted by him before he learned of the error in the judgment, it was ordered the same be paid by the clerk of the court to appellant. The only minute of the judgment on the books or papers [487]*487of the county court except the erroneous entry, is in the clerk’s minute book and is in the following form: “The petition of John Engler for private road; ordered that damages be paid into treasury and road be opened in four months.”

Before taking up the principal question in the case, we will notice the course of the proceedings in the county court for the opening of the road, which was, ' to say the least, very irregular. No objection in writing to the award of the commissioners was preferred by respondent, but he protested orally and threatened to appeal from a confirmation of the report. The statutes do not say objections must be in writing, but this would be the orderly method.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
110 S.W. 16, 131 Mo. App. 481, 1908 Mo. App. LEXIS 466, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/engler-v-knoblaugh-moctapp-1908.