Garnet v. Rodgers

52 Mo. 145
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedMarch 15, 1873
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 52 Mo. 145 (Garnet v. Rodgers) 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
Garnet v. Rodgers, 52 Mo. 145 (Mo. 1873).

Opinion

Tories,, Judge,

delivered the opinion of the court.

This action is brought in the St. Louis Circuit Court on an appeal bond or recognizance executed before a Justice of the Peace by defendant Rogers, as principal, and the other defendants as his sureties.

The petition charges that plaintiff, on the 24th day of March, 1871, obtained a judgment against defendant Rogers before one McAuliffe, a Justice of the. Peace within and for St. Louis County, for $150 65-100 in an action upon an account. That on the 2nd day of April, 1870, said Rogers appealed said case to the St. Louis Circuit Court, and thereupon with the other defendants entered into a recognizance before said Justice under their hands and seals, whereby said Rogers as .principal, [147]*147and the other defendants as sureties, acknowledged themselves indebted to plaintiff in the sum of three hundred and fifty dollars, upon the condition, as follows: “Whereas, John B. Rogers has appealed from the judgment of Daniel McAuliffe Justice of the Peace, in an action between Leslie Garnet, & Co., plaintiffs, vs. John B. Rodgers defendant; now if on such appeal the judgment of the Justice be affirmed, or if on the trial anew in the St. Louis Circuit Court, judgment shall be given against the appellant and he shall satisfy such judgment, or if his appeal shall be dismissed and he shall pay the judgment of the Justice, together with the costs of the appeal, the recognizance shall be void.” That said bond was approved by the Justice and is filed with the petition. That afterwards, on the 17th day of June, 1870, the said appeal of said defendant Rodgers, from the judgment of said Justice, was by the order and judgment of said Circuit Court dismissed ; that said appellant Rodgers has failed and refused to pay said judgment of said Justice, or the costs of the appeal, or any part of the same, but said judgment still remains unpaid and in full force, whereby an action has accrued, &e. Judg_ ment is prayed for the amount of the judgment set forth, and costs.

The defendants in their answer set up as a defense to said petition, that the judgment named in plaintiff’s petition was a judgment rendered by the Justice against defendant Rodgers, by default, and that said Rodgers as principal, and the otker defendants as his sureties, with a view and for the purpose of taking an appeal from said judgment to the St. Louis Court, subsequently executed said recognizance or bond, but that prior to entering into said recognizance and the taking of said supposed appeal no application was made to the Justice to set aside said judgment by default, nor was the same refused by said Justice.

That after the taking of the supposed appeal, the transcript &e., of said cause was filed in the said Circuit Court, and that after the filing of said papers in said court, said Garnett, the plaintiff in the judgment, moved the said Circuit Court to [148]*148dismiss said supposed appeal for the reason that no motion had ever been made before said Justice to set aside said judgment by default before said appeal was taken and said bond executed, and no such motion had ever been refused by said Justice; that upon a hearing of said motion so filed in said Circuit Court the said Circuit Court sustained the same and dismissed said supposed appeal.

The plaintiff demurred to this answer because it did not state facts constituting any defense to plaintiff’s cause of action, The Circuit Court at special term sustained the demurrer, and defendants failing to further answer, judgment was' rendered against them for the amount of the bond; execution being awarded for the amount of the judgment of the* Justice, with costs, &c.

An appeal was then taken to the General Term of the St. Louis Circuit Court, where the judgment of the sj>ecial term was reversed and the cause remanded. From this last judgment plaintiff appealed to this court.

The principal question to be considered here is as to the sufficiency of the defendant’s answer filed in this suit to defeat the plaintiff’s recovery: or, was the bond or recognizance executed by the defendants to procure an appeal from a judgment by default rendered by the J ustice, where no motion had been made to set aside said default, and of course no such motion refused or overruled, binding on the defendants, or was it without authority of law, and therefore void ?

The statute on the subject provides that, “No appeal shall be taken from a judgment by default or of non-suit, unless, within ten days after the rendition of such judgment, application shall have been made to the J ustice by the party aggrieved to set the same aside, and such application shall have been refused.”

It will be seen from this statute that the Justice has no authority to grant an appeal from a judgment by default, unless application to set said default aside has been made within ten days after the rendition of the judgment, and the same refused. Until this is done, no authority is given to grant the [149]*149appeal, or take the recognizance which forms a part thereof. It has been held by this court that an appeal taken without such application is void, and will give the Circuit Court to which the cause is attempted to be taken, no jurisdiction of the cause. (Barnett vs. Ivers, et al., 3 Mo., 369, side page. The case of Adams, et al., vs. Wilson, 10 Mo., 341, was an action brought on three several recognizances taken on an ap peal from the judgments of a justice of the Peace to the Cir cuit Court. The recognizances sued on in that case were executed, and the supposed appeals taken, more than ten days after the rendition of the judgments by the Justice, and after the time expired fixed by law for taking or granting an appeal. Judge Scott, who rendered the judgment of the court in that case, used this language: The law requires recognizances to be entered into before the justice who tries the cause, and within ten days from the day of the trial or from the refusal to set aside a judgment of non-suit. If these requisites are not complied with it will be a good cause for dismissing the appeal. The Justice should see that they are conformed to; otherwise he must know that the appeal can avail nothing. After the expiration of the ten days, the officer has no right to take a recognizance. * * * These recognizances are not like official bonds and instruments of that character, concerning which it has been held that though the requisites of the law under which they are taken be not complied with, yet, being voluntary and not against the policy or provisions of any law, they are obligatory. If a recognizance is not taken within the time required by law the very purpose for which it is entered into may be defeated.”

This case of Adams vs. Wilson, and the principle decided therein, are identical with the case under consideration. We do not now feel at liberty to review and unsettle the law of this case, even if we should think that the law would admit of a different construction, as it cannot be seen how any wrong could grow out of the construction of the law as given in that case, and in fact it is perhaps the best construction that could be given. It is not to be presumed that Justices will take bonds [150]*150in cases not allowed by law, therefore no damage will be apt to result from the construction of the law given, and it will not be departed from.

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Bluebook (online)
52 Mo. 145, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/garnet-v-rodgers-mo-1873.