Landum v. Livingston

394 S.W.2d 573, 1965 Mo. App. LEXIS 629
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 7, 1965
Docket24226
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 394 S.W.2d 573 (Landum v. Livingston) 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
Landum v. Livingston, 394 S.W.2d 573, 1965 Mo. App. LEXIS 629 (Mo. Ct. App. 1965).

Opinion

HOWARD, Judge.

This case originated in magistrate court and on appeal to the circuit court there was a judgment for the plaintiff in the amount of $1,488.50, plus costs, consisting of $488.50 actual damages and $1,000.00 punitive damages.

The evidence shows that on January 31, 1961, the plaintiff, LeRoy Landum, purchased a 1953 Nash automobile from defendant Don’s Car and Financing Company. Plaintiff dealt with defendant Don Melch- *575 ing. Plaintiff made payments of $11.00 per week on the car to Mid-States Investment Company. These payments were occasionally late, but were made up to August 28th or August 29th, and the record shows plaintiff was not in default until September 4, 1961.

Late on the night of August 29th, or early in the morning of August 30, 1961, plaintiff came out on the front porch of his apartment house because of the heat and noticed that his car was missing from its parking place on the street in front of the apartment house. Plaintiff immediately called the police and was advised that his car had been re-possessed by Mid-States Investment Company. The police records showed that on 11:50 P.M. August 29, 1961, a call had been received from one Don Taylor advising that plaintiff’s car had been re-possessed from plaintiff’s address by Mid-States Investment Company.

The next morning, August 30, 1961, plaintiff went to the place of business of Don’s Car and Financing Company and talked to Don Melching. Defendant Mel-ching told plaintiff that his car had been re-possessed by mistake, that “they had his car” and “they would bring it back”. Plaintiff’s car was never returned. Plaintiff testified he had personal property in the car to the value of $100.00 to $150.00.

The police department records also revealed that plaintiff’s car was taken to the police department tow-in lot on September 2nd and was released on September 12, 1961, to Mid-States Investment Company. The company’s records showed a payment of $17.00 tow charge and $5.00 fine for a ticket.

The evidence showed that defendant Mel-ching was vice-president of Don’s Car and Financing Company, which was a Missouri corporation, and also a director and stockholder of the company. He had also, at one time, been employed by Mid-States Investment Company and was treasurer of that corporation. Although he testified that he did not have charge of the records of Mid-States Investment Company, he produced the records of this corporation at the trial. He was the only witness for defendants and testified that the note and mortgage given by plaintiff was sold or assigned to Mid-States Investment Company but the place provided for assignment on the back of the mortgage was blank or “left open”.

Melching testified that he did not remember selling the car to the plaintiff, or talking to him about its re-possession, but from the records bearing his name or initials, he admitted that he did, in fact, sell the car to the plaintiff. The records do not show what happened to the car after September 12, 1961.

On argument both parties agreed that the most important issue in the ease was raised by defendants’ complaint that the award of punitive damages was beyond the jurisdiction of the trial court because this case originated in magistrate court and magistrate courts do not have jurisdiction to award punitive damages. Further, on appeal, the circuit court has only derivative jurisdiction which can not exceed that of the magistrate court from which the appeal is taken. Counsel for the parties have cited no cases from Missouri, or any other jurisdiction, directly ruling this point. Extensive research by the writer has likewise failed to reveal a ruling case.

In our consideration of this issue we are mindful of the well established principles that magistrate courts are courts of limited jurisdiction and have only such jurisdiction as is specifically conferred upon them by statute; that they have no common law jurisdiction, and that no in-tendment or presumption can be indulged to enlarge their jurisdiction beyond that specifically granted by statute.

The applicable statute is Section 482.090 RSMo 1959, V.A.M.S., as amended, Laws 1959, Senate Bill No. 173, (all statutory references are to RSMo 1959 and V.A. *576 M.S.). The pertinent part of this statute reads as follows:

“ * * * magistrates shall have original jurisdiction of all civil actions and proceedings for the recovery of money, whether such action be founded upon contract or tort, or upon a bond or undertaking given in pursuance of law in any civil action or proceeding, or for a penalty or forfeiture given by any statute of this state, when the sum demanded, exclusive of interest and costs, does not exceed * * * two thousand dollars *

Here plaintiff’s recovery totalled $1,488.50 plus costs and thus we have no issue as to the jurisdictional amount.

The important and determinative part of the statute, as above quoted, is that which grants jurisdiction to magistrate courts in “all civil actions and proceedings for the recovery of money.” This unquestionably is a “civil actions * * * for the recovery of money” and thus unless other parts of the statute, as above quoted, deny jurisdiction to the magistrate court, such jurisdictional issue must be decided in the affirmative.

Defendant contends that an action for punitive damages is an action for a penalty; that in Missouri punitive damages are not recoverable by virtue of any statute, but by virtue of the common law; that, therefore, the action does not come within the statutory provision “for a penalty or forfeiture given by any statute of this state”; that magistrate courts do not have common law jurisdiction, and, therefore, the magistrate court is without jurisdiction to award punitive damages.

The case of State ex rel. and to the Use of Berra v. Sestric, 349 Mo. 182, 159 S.W.2d 786, considered the similar and almost identical statute covering jurisdiction of a justice of the peace court. This was a suit to recover delinquent sales taxes due the State of Missouri, which originated in a justice of the peace court. It was not a suit either “founded upon contract or tort” and the contention was that, therefore, the justice of the peace court was without jurisdiction because such court’s jurisdiction of “civil actions and proceedings for the recovery of money” was limited to such actions as were “founded upon contract or tort.” The Supreme Court gave careful and detailed consideration to this contention and concluded that the phrase “whether such action be founded upon contract or tort” did not limit the general scope of jurisdiction granted by the phrase “all civil actions and proceedings for the recovery of money.” The court therefore held that the justice of the peace did have jurisdiction of suits for the collection of delinquent sales taxes, even though such suit was not founded on either contract or tort. In arriving at this conclusion, the court said: “As has been seen, the statutes, supra, expressly confer jurisdiction upon justices of the peace ‘of all civil actions and proceedings for the recovery of money’ within prescribed monetary limits.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
394 S.W.2d 573, 1965 Mo. App. LEXIS 629, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/landum-v-livingston-moctapp-1965.