Leise v. Mitchell

53 Mo. App. 563, 1893 Mo. App. LEXIS 105
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 17, 1893
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 53 Mo. App. 563 (Leise v. Mitchell) 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
Leise v. Mitchell, 53 Mo. App. 563, 1893 Mo. App. LEXIS 105 (Mo. Ct. App. 1893).

Opinion

Gill, J.

— The plaintiff, Mrs. Leise, sued the defendant Mitchell, sheriff of LaEayette county, and the other defendants, Smith, Heddens & Co., in trespass for the alleged wrongful seizure and conversion of a certain stock of goods which she, the plaintiff, had in her possession as mortgagee of one Hackley. ‘

[565]*565The facts giving rise to the controversy are substantially these: Hackley was a merchant at Corder, Mo., and was indebted to Smith, Heddens & Co., of Kansas City, and, as the jury found, was also owing Mrs. Leise the balance on a note of something over $600. On June 1, 1889, Hackley, being embarrassed financially, executed a mortgage on his stock of goods to Mrs. Leise to secure her claim, and she went into immediate possession under the mortgage. On June tenth, Smith, Heddens & Co., doubtless for the purpose of contesting the validity of the mortgage, sued in attachment and directed the sheriff to levy on the goods, though then in Mrs. Leise’s possession. But the writ of attachment in the suit brought by Smith, Heddens & Co. was subsequently held void and was quashed (Smith, Heddens & Co. v. Hackley, 44 Mo. App. 614), and thereupon followed the institution of this action in the LaFayette circuit court.. At the return term the defendants appeared and filed an application for change of venue and on two grounds, to-wit: First, on account of an alleged prejudice of the inhabitants, and second, for an alleged prejudice of the judge of the court. On this application the court first ordered a change of venue to Ray county; but subsequently, at the same term, rescinded this order on plaintiff’s motion and sent the case to Saline county, as being “more convenient to the opposite party.” In thus transferring the cause to Saline county the court placed the order specifically on the ground of the alleged prejudice of the inhabitants of LaFayette county, and expressly reserved action on account of prejudice of the judge until the cause should reach Saline county, ‘ ‘when an order will be made for the election of a special judge to try the cause, if the parties fail to agree upon a special judge to try the same.”

[566]*566When the case reached Saline county the defendants moved the court to set aside the order rescinding the order first made transferring the cause to Ray county, and that the case be sent to said Ray county, mainly upon the ground that the court had no jurisdiction to rescind said order of change to said Ray county. This motion was overruled; and, subsequently, the parties failing to agree on some party to try the cause, a special judge was elected for that purpose.

Then followed another motion by defendants to remand the cause to LaFayette county, on the alleged ground among others that the LaFayette court had no jurisdiction to make the order changing the venue to Saline county until the parties be first given an opportunity to agree upon a special judge, etc. This motion was overruled by the special judge; the cause proceeded to trial resulting in a verdict and judgment for plaintiff, and defendants appealed.

I. The principal matter naturally presented in the foregoing statement relates to the propriety of the court’s action as to the change of venue. It will be observed that the trial judge first made an order transferring the cause to Ray county, outside of his circuit. Subsequently, but at the same term of court, this order was on motion rescinded, and the case then sent to Saline. The power of the court to make an order vacating an order for change of venue made at the same term is no longer an open question in this state. State v. Webb, 74 Mo. 333; Colvin v. Six, 79 Mo. 200.

In the Webb case Judge Henry uses this language: “When it is said that, After a change of venue is granted, the case is no longer within the jurisdiction of the court awarding the same,’ it is to be understood that this is so only while the order remains in force. The court certainly has the same power during the [567]*567term at which it occurred to correct an error made by it in the matter of a change of venue, as with respect to any other order made in the progress of a cause.” So then we view this case just as though there never was an order for transferring the cause to Ray county.

This point settled, a further matter as to the change of venue appears in this record. Defendants’ application for removal of the cause from LaFayette county went to the disqualification of the inhabitants of the county as also the judge of the court. The court, acting on the defendants’ objection to the body of the county, ordered the cause transferred to Saline county, where the cause of complaint did not exist,' and which was the most convenient to the plaintiffs; and there heeding the objection to the judge (this being in the same circuit) ordered the election of a special judge to try the cause, the litigants failing to agree on a party for that purpose. It seems to be defendants’ contention that, when the ease was pending in LaFayette, Judge Field should have first taken up the objection to the judge, have permitted the selection of a special judge by agreement of parties or by special election, and then to have abandoned the case to the keeping of such special judge in LaFayette county, whose duty it would then have been to award a change of venue to some other county based on the disqualification of the inhabitants of LaFayette. The section of the statute relied upon to sustain this position reads thus: “If reasonable notice shall have been given to the adverse party or his attorney of record, the court or judge, as the case may be, shall consider the application, and, if it be sufficient, a change of venue shall be awarded to some county in the same or an adjoining circuit where the cause or causes complained of do not exist, as convenient as may be to the opposite party; provided, that where the application for a.change of venue is [568]*568founded on the interest, prejudice or other objection to the judge, a change of venue shall not be awarded to another county without a reasonable opportunity having first been allowed the parties to agree upon a special judge, or for the election of a special judge as provided by law.” Revised Statutes, 1889, see. 2262. We must regard the contention of the learned counsel more technical than reasonable. When the purpose of the proviso in the foregoing section is considered, there can be little doubt that the court in this instance did not violate the evident intention of the statute. The latter part of this section, beginning with, “provided that where the application,” etc., was an amendment to the old section 3733 as it appeared in the Revision of 1879. Before such amendment it was ruled in this state that under the act relating to special judges (secs. 1107, etc., Revised Statutes, 1879) it was discretionary with the court, to whom an application for change of venue was made on account of prejudice of the judge, whether a change would be ordered to another circuit or that opportunity be given for the selection of a special judge. Barnes v. McMullin, 78 Mo. 260. And it was the province of this amendment, first occurring in the revision of 1889, to take away this discretion of the trial court and secure to the litigants a special judge, who should try the cause where it was then pending rather than be forced to go to another county to try the cause. State ex rel. v. Bacon, 107 Mo. 627.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
53 Mo. App. 563, 1893 Mo. App. LEXIS 105, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/leise-v-mitchell-moctapp-1893.