Mason v. Kansas City Belt Railway Co.

125 S.W. 1128, 226 Mo. 212, 1910 Mo. LEXIS 60
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedMarch 1, 1910
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 125 S.W. 1128 (Mason v. Kansas City Belt Railway Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mason v. Kansas City Belt Railway Co., 125 S.W. 1128, 226 Mo. 212, 1910 Mo. LEXIS 60 (Mo. 1910).

Opinion

WOODSON, J.

Plaintiffs brought this suit in the circuit court of Jackson county, Missouri, for the recovery of damages sustained by them through the alleged negligence of the defendant in causing the death of their son, at Kansas City, Kansas.

The petition in this case was filed August 4, 1906, which stated a good cause of action against the defendant; but as no point is made in that regard, it will receive no- further consideration.

The facts are not disputed, and are stated by counsel for respondent, substantially, as follows:

A former suit was- instituted by plaintiffs to recover damages on account of their son’s death, in the Independence division of the circuit court of Jackson county, Missouri. The action came on for trial at the June term, 1906, of said court, at Independence, and the following proceedings were had: the trial was begun, and plaintiffs introduced all of their testimony, and at the end of plaintiffs’ case, they were forced to take a nonsuit with leave to move to set -the same aside; and afterwards, during the said June term of the Independence court, the plaintiffs duly moved the court to set aside said nonsuit and at said term the court denied said .motion, and thereupon rendered judgment in said ■action in favor of defendant, against plaintiffs. No appeal was taken and no further steps whatever were taken in the cas.e at Independence, but plaintiffs filed this, their second action, in the Kansas City division of the same court on August 4, 1906, within one year from the date of the nonsuit. Following the bringing of this second suit, at Kansas City, [215]*215the defendant in dne time filed its motion to dismiss the canse for the reason that the judgment in the Independence division was res adjudicaba as between the parties to the second cause. This motion in due time was taken up and considered by the court upon an agreed statement of facts, a portion of which was as follows:

“That on the trial of the issues between the parties hereto, based on the same cause of action, at the June term, 1906, of this court, at Independence, Jackson county, Missouri, plaintiffs took a nonsuit, with leave to move to set the same aside; that at said term, said plaintiffs duly moved the court to set aside said nonsuit, and that at said term said court denied said motion, and thereupon rendered judgment in said action in favor of defendant, against plaintiffs, which judgment was not appealed from by plaintiffs, and that at the time of the filing of the petition in this cause of action, against which this motion to dismiss is directed, the said June term, 1906, of this court, at Independence, Jackson county, Missouri, had duly ended.”

And upon these facts the court sustained the defendant’s motion to dismiss this cause, to which action of the court plaintiffs duly excepted, and from this ruling and order of court the plaintiffs in due time appealed to this court.

I. The real question presented by this record for determibation is, was the action of the trial court in sustaining respondent’s motion to dismiss this suit legal and proper? The correct answer to that question, however, depends upon the proper determination of two or three legal propositions.

The record discloses the fact that plaintiffs brought against defendant a prior suit, setting up the same cause of action that is stated in the petition filed herein. At the June term, 1906, of the circuit court, sitting at Independence, said cause was called for trial, [216]*216and the following proceedings were then and there had, namely: the plaintiffs introduced their evidence, and at the close thereof, the defendant asked an instruction in the nature of a demurrer to the evidence, which was by the court given. Thereupon, the plaintiffs took a nonsuit with leave to move to set the same aside. In due time and in proper form plaintiffs filed their motion to set aside the nonsuit which they were forced to take on account of the action of the court in giving said instruction, and also asked for a new trial. This motion was, by the court, overruled, and, thereupon, a judgment of nonsuit was entered against the plaintiffs. No appeal was taken by them from that judgment, but instead thereof, as before stated, they instituted this suit upon the same cause of action in the circuit court of Kansas City.

Counsel for defendant contend, by their motion to dismiss this action, that the foregoing facts are res adjudicatei, and constitute a complete bar to appellants’ right to a recovery herein.

In support of this contention, counsel insist that the plaintiffs in this case did not suffer a nonsuit to go against them in the former suit, but that there was a final judgment rendered by the court in favor of the defendant, and against the plaintiffs, and that they having failed to appeal from that judgment-, it became res adjudicaba, as before stated; and for that reason neither section 2868, as amended by the Act of 1905 (Laws 1905, p. 138), por section 4285, Revised Statutes 1899, is applicable to this case, and are only availing where a nonsuit is suffered.

In support of that insistence, counsel relies upon the case of Wetmcrre v. Crouch, 188 Mo. 653. The statute the court there had under consideration was section 4285, before mentioned, contained in article 2 of chapter 48, entitled “Limitations of Actions.” That section reads as follows:

[217]*217“If an action shall have been commenced within the times respectively prescribed in this chapter, and the plaintiff therein suffer a nonsuit, or, after a verdict for him, the judgment be arrested, or after a judgment for him, the same be reversed on appeal or error, such plaintiff may commence a new action from time to time, within one year after such nonsuit suffered or such judgment arrested or reversed; and if the cause of action survive or descend to his heirs, or survive to his executors or administrators, they may, in like manner, commence a new action within the time herein allowed to such plaintiff, or, if no executor or administrator be qualified, then within one year after letters testamentary or of administration shall have been granted to him.”

In construing this statute, this court, speaking through Judge Lamm, in the case before cited, on page 652, said: “A broad view of this section — a view that takes in as well the remedy to be advanced as the mischief to be retarded and that does not deal in mere ‘mint and anise and cummin,’ but goes to the weightier matter of the law — shows that it was in the legislative mind that a litigant should have a day in court — a trial on the merits of his cause. If the proceedings fell short of that, if the judgment was arrested, or if for plaintiff and reversed on error or appeal, or if some interlocutory matter Supervened and thwarted a trial on the merits, then the prescribed period of the Statute of Limitations, ex gratia, should be extended for one year as atonement for the miscarriage of justice. It is apropos to the subject to note that the frosty attitude of courts towards statutes of limitation is attested by the earlier decisions, but all judicial frigidity has dissolved under the benignant sunlight of modern apprehension of the salutary principles underlying such laws and the experiences of commercial peoples. As said by Wood (Wood on Lim. [3 Ed.], sec. 4): ‘These statutes are declared to be “among the most beneficial [218]*218to he

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Bluebook (online)
125 S.W. 1128, 226 Mo. 212, 1910 Mo. LEXIS 60, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mason-v-kansas-city-belt-railway-co-mo-1910.