Glader v. City of Neosho

193 S.W.2d 620, 238 Mo. App. 999, 1946 Mo. App. LEXIS 263
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 8, 1946
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 193 S.W.2d 620 (Glader v. City of Neosho) 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
Glader v. City of Neosho, 193 S.W.2d 620, 238 Mo. App. 999, 1946 Mo. App. LEXIS 263 (Mo. Ct. App. 1946).

Opinion

BY THE COURT.

Respondent will hereafter be referred to as plaintiff, and appellant as defendant, both as below.

On September 6,1944, plaintiff filed her petition in the Circuit Court of Barry County. Thereafter, the defendant filed its amended answer and plaintiff filed her reply. The case came on for trial on March 27, 1945, the trial court gave its instructions and on March 28, 1945, the jury returned a verdict in favor of plaintiff. After the rendition of such verdict, defendant filed its motion for new trial, *1001 which was overruled on June 29, 1945. On that.day, defendant gave n-otiee of an appeal to this court from the judgment on such verdict. On the same date the trial judge made an order extending the time for filing the transcript and bill of exceptions until November 1, 1945. By an order bearing the date of October 31, 1945, the trial judge certified that, “within the time so allowed and extended by the court for filing Bill of Exceptions and transcript of record herein, the defendant presents this, his Bill of Exceptions, and transcript of record,” etc. Such transcript, or bill of exceptions, was originally filed in the Circuit Court of Barry County on October 31, 1945, as appears from the stamp of the clerk thereof. So far, the steps of record taken to secure appellate review apparently conformed to Laws of Missouri for 1943, beginning at page 353 thereof.

On January 18, 1946, plaintiff filed in this court’her amended motion to dismiss the appeal of defendant and suggestions in support of such motion. The first ground of such motion is that defendant failed and neglected, without good cause, to file in this court its transcript on appeal “within the additional time for such transcript on appeal, as allowed by the Circuit Court of Barry County, in violation of Mo. R. S. A. 847.137” (Sec. 137, Laws of 1943, page 394). Such section requires that the transcript on appeal be filed in the appellate court within ninety (90) days after the notice of appeal. (Subject to extension, as provided in Section 138, following.)

While such transcript appears by the file mark of the clerk of the Circuit Court of Barry County to have been filed in that court on October 31, 1945, such transcript was not actually filed in this court until November 9, 1945, as appears from a mémorandum made by the clerk of this court.

Even though the file mark of the circuit clerk of Barry County does show that such transcript was filed there, in completed form, on October 31, 1945, his own affidavit shows that he certified the transcript on appeal to this court on November 8, 1945. Such transcript was not filed in this court on November 1, 1945, but on November 9, 1945.

The suggestions of defendant in opposition to the motion to dismiss the appeal and the affidavit attached to such suggestions show that the attorney for defendant went to Cassville and hunted up the trial judge to secure an amendment to such order from such judge several days after October 31, 1945, and the transcript on appeal was not filed'with the clerk of this court, either as a bill of exceptions or as a transcript of the record on appeal, before November 9, 1945.

It is true, that Section 135 requires the filing of such transcript on appeal only with the clerk of the trial court, but Section 137 requires such transcript to be transferred to the appellate court within ninety (90) days from the filing of such notice of appeal. (In this case, *1002 November 1, 1945, as such time was extended.) This was not done. Section 137 does not explicitly provide by whom such transcript on appeal shall be filed in the appellate court. Either defendant or the clerk of the trial court must have been derelict in duty, if such transcript was actually filed in the circuit court on October 31, 1945, as such transcript was not filed in this court until November 9, 1945, and there was no order by the trial court extending such time beyond November 1, 1945.

Defendant says .in its suggestions in opposition to the motion of plaintiff to dismiss appeal, that “it still devolves upon the appellant to take steps to see that such duty (the duty of the circuit clerk) is performed. ’ ’ We agree to this. It is necessary to get away from old Sections 1194 and 1199, Revised Statutes 1939, referred to by defendant in its suggestions, and now follow the 1943 law, and that law explicitly requires that such transcript on appeal' be filed in the appellate court by someone, and it is now the manifest duty of an appellant to see that such transcript is timely lodged in the appellate court. An appellant can take whatever steps are necessary to secure such transfer. Our Supreme Court has said:

“The right of appeal in actions at law did not exist at common law, but is conferred by statute. [2 R. C. L. 27, sec. 2; 3 C. J. 299, sec. 3.] It is a familiar rule that the right of appeal exists, therefore, only where the statute provides for it and that a compliance with mandatory statutory procedure is essential. [Pence v. Kansas City Laundry Co. (Mo.), 59 S. W. (2d) 633; Manthey v. Kellerman Contracting Co., 311 Mo. 147, 277 S. W. 927; Pfothauer v. Ridgway, 307 Mo. 529, 271 S. W. 50.] We have no authority to act on appeals beyond that provided for by the Legislature.” [Stephens v. D. N. Oberman Mfg. Co., 70 S. W. (2d) 899, 334 Mo. 1078.] And the case of Downing v. Lashot, 201 Mo. App. 75, l. c. 77, cited by plaintiff, which we regard as very much in point, and from which we quote, as follows:
“This and other courts have time and again stated that the duty of perfecting and prosecuting an appeal with diligence is primarily on ,the appellant and that he cannot, after- taking the appeal, rest on his oars trusting to the clerk of either the trial or apellate court to remind him of any necessary step in perfecting his appeal. [State v. Pieski, 248 Mo. 718, 154 S. W. 747; Hofstatter v. Cantrell, 180 S. W. 435; State ex rel. v. Robertson, 264 Mo. 661, 671, 175 S. W. 610; State v. Chilton, 200 S. W. 745; State v. Dempsey, 168 Mo. App. 298, 153 S. W. 1064; State v. Faith, 180 Mo. App. 484, 494, 166 S. W. 649; State v. Bailey, 192 Mo. App. 391, 395, 181 S. W. 605] ” [See also Farmers Produce Exchange of Lebanon v. Esther, 122 S. W. (2d) 35.] We could cite many other decisions of the Supreme Court and the several Courts of Appeals to the same effect. The interested reader *1003 is simply referred to 2 Mo. Digest, page 360, and pocket parts for said volume for 1945 and 1946.

Section 6, Mo. Statutes for 1943, at page 358 (Mo. R. S. A., 847.6), Subdivision (b), explicitly requires that application for an extension of time for appellant to file an abstract on appeal be made before the expiration of the time previously , given, and such application was not made, in this case, and such time was not extended. Only the trial judge can make such extension and he must do it before the time allowed by law or his former extension has expired.

In view of the position we have taken as to the time when such transcript of record on appeal must be filed in this court, it is necessary to sustain plaintiff’s motion to dismiss defendant’s appeal on the first ground of plaintiff’s amended motion.

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Bluebook (online)
193 S.W.2d 620, 238 Mo. App. 999, 1946 Mo. App. LEXIS 263, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/glader-v-city-of-neosho-moctapp-1946.