Higbee v. Spangler

104 S.W. 1143, 127 Mo. App. 220, 1907 Mo. App. LEXIS 488
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedOctober 22, 1907
StatusPublished

This text of 104 S.W. 1143 (Higbee v. Spangler) 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
Higbee v. Spangler, 104 S.W. 1143, 127 Mo. App. 220, 1907 Mo. App. LEXIS 488 (Mo. Ct. App. 1907).

Opinion

NORTONI, J.

The suit is to recover the penalty of one hundred dollars provided by statute (sec. 825, R. S. 1899), and levied against the clerk of any circuit court for failing to immediately transmit, on change of venue, [222]*222a transcript of the record in any cause, the venue of which has been changed to the circuit court of another county.

Defendant was clerk of the circuit court of Clark county. There were a number of cases pending in the court of which he was clerk, between members of the Llewellyn family, and one case of Higbee v. Llewellyn, in which case a change of venue was taken by the defendant therein during the fall term, and the cause was ordered transferred to the circuit court of Schuyler county. The Clark Circuit Court adjourned November 26, 1902, and soon thereafter, during the month of December, the defendant circuit clerk, Mr. Spangler, proceeded to make up a transcript of the case of Higbee v. Llewellyn, preparatory to its transmission to the clerk of the Schuyler Circuit Court, and did the same with respect to the transcript in another case of Llewellyn v. Llewellyn, a partition suit pending in the same court and in which a change of venue had been likewise granted to Schuyler county at the same time and out of which arose the controversy determined by this court in Llewellyn v. Spangler, 109 Mo. App. 396, 88 S. W. 1021. About the time the transcripts were completed in the two cases and ready for transmission to Schuyler county, Mr. .John A. Whiteside, a reputable member of the Clark county bar, who was attorney for defendant Llewellyn in each of the cases mentioned, called upon Mr. Spangler, the circuit clerk, and to the end of preventing further accumulation of costs, requested that he withhold the transcripts in the cases of Higbee v. Llewellyn and Llewellyn v. Llewellyn until further orders thereabout, at the same time informing him that a proposition of compromise, or rather, a proposition to arbitrate these two cases and several others in which members of the Llewellyn family were adversaries, was then pending, and would probably result in an adjustment of all of the various phases of the unfortunate family [223]*223controversy then extensively involved in the circuit courts of Clark, Schuyler and Marion counties. The request was acceded to and the transcripts in the cases were accordingly withheld. It is obvious from the evidence that Mr. Whitesicle, while representing defendant only in these cases, acted in entire good faith in the matter, and it is likewise obvious that Mr. Spangler acted in good faith in withholding the transmission of the transcripts at the instance of Mr. Whiteside, the purpose of each being to contribute as much as possible toward preventing the accumulation of further costs in a litigation which then bid fair to terminate in a friendly adjustment by the intervention of three uncles of the Llewellyns. As suggested, Mr. Spangler laid the transcripts aside very carefully. This was in the month of December; on the 31st day of which month his term of office expired, and during his incumbency thereafter, no one mentioned the transcript in Higbee v. Llewellyn, or the other case above mentioned, and consequently, at the expiration of his term, Mr. Spangler vacated and on January 1st, placed the office of circuit clerk in charge of his successor, without having transmitted the transcripts and original papers, as required by the statute, to the Schuyler Circuit Court. The next regular term of the Schuyler Circuit Court, and the one to which the case of Higbee v. Llewellyn, on change of venue, was properly returnable, had the transcript been duly forwarded, Avas to be holden on May 1th following. In the interim after the change of venue was awarded and the May term of the Schuyler Circuit Court, about January 15th, after Spangler had retired from office, all negotiations as to arbitration of the various cases mentioned were suspended and the parties determined to continue the controversy in court. No one notified Mr. Spangler.or his successor in office of this fact, however, until in the latter part of April, the attorney for plaintiff in Higbee v. Llewellyn discovered the cause had not reached the [224]*224Schuyler Circuit Court and was not on tbe May docket. Whereupon, having inquired of Mr. Spangler the reason therefor, was informed by him that Mr. Whiteside had requested the transmission of the transcript to be deferred'until further orders, etc., on account of the proposed arbitrament above referred to. Mr. Spangler then being informed that all efforts at arbitration had been abandoned about the middle of January, repaired at once to the court house and in company with his successor in office, discovered the transcripts where he had safely laid them some months before and forthwith, on that day, forwarded the same to the circuit court of Schuyler county, too late, however, for the canse to be placed on the docket of the May term, on which docket it otherwise should have appeared.

In the circuit court, it was insisted that Higbee v. Llewellyn Avas not included in the proposition for an arbitration and that Mr. Charles T. Llewellyn was not attorney for plaintiff Higbee therein, and therefore had no authority thereabout, and while there is respectable proof in support of this contention, there is substantial evidence to the effect that Mr. Llewellyn was one of Higbee’s attorneys and that the Higbee case was included within the contemplated arbitration. However ’ this may be, the jury found their verdict in affirmance of the theory that Higbee v. Llewellyn was included and that Mr. James T. LleAvellyn was attorney for plaintiff therein and conducted negotiations thereabout with Mr. Whiteside and Mr. Montgomery. Much of appellant’s argument in this court is directed against the admission of evidence as to Avhat Mr. Charles T. Llewellyn did and said with respect to including it in the arbitration. This line of objection is not well taken for the reason the evidence tended to prove that he Avas one of the attorneys for the plaintiff, Mr. Higbee. It appeared that Mr. LleAvellyn’s name Avas on the judge’s docket as an attorney for the plaintiff. It also appeared that, with the [225]*225knowledge and consent of plaintiff, lie ordered witnesses for him and signed the precipe book in the clerk’s office therefor, and there are many other facts and circumstances in proof tending to establish the fact that he was one of plaintiff’s attorneys. This proof ivas competent as tending to show his authority over the case.

Predicated, on the same theory, the plaintiff requested numerous instructions to the effect that unless Higbee himself authorized the defendant circuit clerk to withhold the transmission of the transcript, the finding should be for plaintiff. All instructions predicted upon this theory were properly refused for the reason they ignored the proof tending to show Mr. Llewellyn, as his attorney, had included his case in the proposed arbitration and had. some knowledge at least of Mr. Whiteside’s endeavor to prevent further costs by ordering the transcript withheld; for it is certain that if Mr. Llewellyn, as attorney for Higbee, participated in any manner or consented to the clerk withholding the transcript then plaintiff Higbee is precluded thereby as effectually as if he himself authorized or requested the clerk to withhold, it. Of course the plaintiff in this case cannot recover the penalty provided here if either he or his attorney authorized Mr. Spangler to withhold the transcript or acceded and consented to the withholding thereof at the request of Mr. Whiteside.

The statute under which the suit Avas prosecuted is as follows:

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Related

Randol v. Garoutte
78 Mo. App. 609 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1899)
Llewellyn v. Spangler
88 S.W. 1021 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1905)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
104 S.W. 1143, 127 Mo. App. 220, 1907 Mo. App. LEXIS 488, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/higbee-v-spangler-moctapp-1907.