Kyger v. Koeper

194 S.W.2d 51, 238 Mo. App. 947, 1946 Mo. App. LEXIS 258
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 12, 1946
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 194 S.W.2d 51 (Kyger v. Koeper) 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
Kyger v. Koeper, 194 S.W.2d 51, 238 Mo. App. 947, 1946 Mo. App. LEXIS 258 (Mo. Ct. App. 1946).

Opinion

*951 BLAIR, J.

This is an action in prohibition. The first thing for consideration is respondents’ motion to dismiss the appeal of appellant.

The burden of such motion is that appellant called the transcript on appeal a “Bill of Exceptions,” instead of a transcript, and inserted unnecessary matters therein. We have examined the so-called “Bill of Exceptions” and find that it contains everything required in a transcript on appeal, and seems to have been timely filed. It is true, that the so-called “Bill of Exceptions” contains matters not required to be filed to secure appellate review; but it does contain everything required in a transcript on appeal. We do not feel that, because appellant has called his filing a “Bill of Exceptions” and inserted therein matters not required in a transcript on appeal,' these things should brand the transcript as insufficient.

It is true that the bill of exceptions, as formerly termed, has been abolished and only a transcript on appeal, which contains matters formerly shown by a bill of exceptions, is now required. If appellant has inserted matters not required in a transcript on appeal, this may be of interest in a proper court on a question of costs, if that question is raised; but we do not feel that an appellant should be deprived of his appeal simply because he has improperly called his transcript on appeal a “Bill of Exceptions,” and has inserted matters therein not necessary on an appeal. The motion to dismiss the appeal is overruled, and we will proceed to the merits of the appeal.

On January 3, 1946, respondents, then plaintiffs, filed in the circuit court their petition, stating that appellant, then defendant, was a justice of the peace of Pierce Township, Lawrence County, Missouri, and that one M. E. England and Omah England filed before defendant a suit against plaintiffs for unlawful detainer and for damages for such detention, and that on October 12, 1945, plaintiffs filed with defendant an affidavit stating that a member of the General Assembly, then in session, was an attorney in said suit, and-that said attorney was in attendance upon said General Assembly, and that his appearance at the trial before defendant was necessary, and asked for a continuance of the suit before defendant, in accordance with the laws of Missouri for 1943, page 383, Section 96; and that on October 15, 1945, the defendant rendered judgment in favor of plaintiff, in said suit before him, for possession of the property involved and for damages in the sum of $250, and costs of suit; that said defendant overruled a motion to set aside such judgment and threatened to issue execution on such judgment.

, Plaintiffs, respondents here, contended that said justice of the peace acted in excess of his jurisdiction, because of the filing of such *952 affidavit.. Plaintiffs contended also that the office of justice of the peace had been abolished by the Constitution adopted February 27, 1945, bpt respondents did not argue the last point here, or in their brief, and we will treat that contention as abandoned, and address ourselves solely to the effect of the affidavit filed with the justice of the peace, and whether a writ of prohibition was properly issued.

The trial judge issued a preliminary writ of prohibition on November 19,1945. On the hearing, defendant, now appellant, asked for a directed verdict, which was denied by the tidal judge, and, after such denial, and on November 28, 1945, made the preliminary writ permanent. On the same day, defendant, appellant here, filed his motion to set aside such judgment and permanent writ, and this motion seems to have been overruled on the same day. On that day, to-wit, November 28, 1945, defendant gave notice that he appealed to this Court, and, on November 29, 1945, appears a memorandum of the clerk of the Circuit Court of Lawrence County, Missouri, that he had mailed a copy of defendant’s notice of appeal to the attorneys for plaintiffs, and, on December 21, 1945, said clerk certified to the correctness of such notice of appeal and service on respondents’ attorney.

On January 5, 1946, as appears from a memorandum of our clerk, and his file mark thereon, such transcript, called a “Bill of Exceptions” was filed in this Court. The case is thus before us.

There can be no question, in the light of the statute and of the decisions of the Supreme Court and the several Courts.of Appeals, that defendant had no right to proceed at that time in the case before him, after such affidavit, if in proper form, was filed. Respondents cite the following statute and cases, and we use them, as we regard them as entirely sufficient, to-wit: Section 96, Civil Code, 1943 Session Acts, 383; State v. Clark, 267 S. W. 413; State v. Myers, 179 S. W. (2d) 72.

The Legislature has seen fit to require all courts to continue civil and criminal cases pending therein, when such affidavit is filed, and the courts of this State have time and again held that such an affidavit stays the hand of all courts of this State. It was not for defendant, appellant here, to say that such affidavit was fraudulent and filed simply to postpone hearing of the case before him, whatever defendant or counsel may have thought. We understand that counsel for appellant do not now argue otherwise.

But appellant contends that prohibition was not the proper remedy, and that appeal in the case before the justice of the peace was the only remedy respondents had and that the trial judge erred in granting the preliminary writ and later in making such writ permanent. On the other hand, respondents contend that the filing of such affidavit deprived appellant of all jurisdiction in the case, previously pending before him, and, for that reason, prohibition is the proper remedy.

*953 A reading of Section 96, Laws of 1943, page 383, does not indicate that even a proper legislative affidavit deprives a court of all jurisdiction, for said section simply provides that the filing of such affidavit “shall be a sufficient cause for a continuance.” If the court should be deprived of jurisdiction by the filing of such affidavit, it could not even make an order of continuance. Hence, respondents must mean that such court is not permanently deprived of jurisdiction, but simply has no further jurisdiction to proceed to trial at that time. In other words, the court before whom said case has been pending is temporarily deprived of jurisdiction.

It cannot well be contended, in view of Section 2835, Revised Statutes Mo. 1939, that justice of the peace courts had no jurisdiction in unlawful detainer suits. So, it is evident that appellant, as justice of the peace of Lawrence County, had original jurisdiction in unlawful detainer cases in that county. Was he deprived, even temporarily, of such jurisdiction by the filing of such affidavit? We understand that respondents only seek to justify the issuance of the writ of prohibition on the ground that defendant was acting in excess of his jurisdiction, when he entered and sought to enforce his judgment.

Appellant cites Carpenter v. Alton R. Co., 148 S. W. (2d) 68. True, in that case, an application for change of venue was filed and not acted upon. We are unable to see any difference between an application for change of venue, such as was filed in the Carpenter case (Sec. 1062, R. S.

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Related

Todd Ex Rel. Todd v. Stokes
215 S.W.2d 464 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1948)
Kyger v. Koerper
207 S.W.2d 46 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1946)

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Bluebook (online)
194 S.W.2d 51, 238 Mo. App. 947, 1946 Mo. App. LEXIS 258, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kyger-v-koeper-moctapp-1946.