Maxwell v. Andrew County

146 S.W.2d 621, 347 Mo. 156, 1941 Mo. LEXIS 525
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedJanuary 4, 1941
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 146 S.W.2d 621 (Maxwell v. Andrew County) 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
Maxwell v. Andrew County, 146 S.W.2d 621, 347 Mo. 156, 1941 Mo. LEXIS 525 (Mo. 1941).

Opinion

*160 HAYS, J.

Plaintiffs, a former sheriff of Andrew County and the surety on his official bond, sued defendant Andrew County seeking a declaratory judgment to the effect that they were not liable for the repayment of certain moneys which the defendant claims were illegally paid to the sheriff and his deputies. Defendant filed a counterclaim for reimbursement. The case was referred and the finding *161 of the referee for plaintiffs both upon their cause of action and on the counterclaim was sustained by the trial judge. Defendant has appealed. Respondents have moved to dismiss the appeal because of defects in the appellant’s abstract and brief, which we shall separately consider.

Issues below were joined upon a second amended petition by an answer thereto. Respondents contend that this petition was not properly abstracted. Appellant has followed the rather unusual course of summarizing the allegations of the petition rather than printing it verbatim; but such a practice, while not usually to be recommended, seems to be permitted by our rule 13. Respondents have filed no supplemental abstract from which we can determine the sufficiency of the summary of this pleading made by the appellant.

The abstract of the bill of exceptions contains certain statements which are conclusions of the writer of the abstract as to the legal effect of the evidence. This is not proper practice and the same may be said of appellant’s failure to abstract all the exhibits introduced in evidence; but here again we are met by the fact that in the absence of a supplemental abstract we cannot say that the evidence is insufficiently presented to us to enable us to rule the case.

While the complete report of the referee is not included in the record, his formal findings of fact and conclusions of law are set out. It would have been better to have included the entire report, but we cannot hold this omission to be a fatal defect. Again the motion for new' trial is not set out in haee verba, but the abstracter says that it was a recapitulation of the errors alleged in the exceptions to the referee’s report which are fully abstracted, and that it also alleged error on the part of the trial judge in ordering a compulsory reference. Again the better practice would have been to have set out the whole motion, but in view of the wording of rule 13 we cannot hold that the failure to do so would authorize dismissal.

Our rule 15 requires that the appellant’s brief contain: “Á fair and concise statement of the facts of the case without reiteration, statements of law, or argument.” In certain particulars appellant’s brief offends against this rule. The statement does contain argumentative matter, but only in minor particulars. We also require appellant’s brief to contain a jurisdictional statement. Such statement should concisely and clearly inform us of the exact ground on which our jurisdiction is claimed to rest, and should refer briefly to the constitutional provisions and decided eases sustaining such claim of jurisdiction. There is no jurisdictional statement in this brief. However, our rule is a very recently adopted one and, in the present case, involving as it does matters of large public interest, we do not feel justified in penalizing its violation by a dismissal of the appeal. We therefore consider the case upon its merits.

*162 llespondent Jess Peter Maxwell served as sheriff of Andrew County from 1933 to 1937. Shortly after taking office he talked to the members of the County Court “with regard to their paying me for the use of my automobile and my deputies’ automobiles on calls.” The calls referred to seem to have been trips made by the sheriff and his deputies to investigate alleged violations of the criminal law, and, in certain instances, to investigate and report on automobile accidents occurring in his county. The judges told Maxwell to present bills for these matters, which he accordingly did, and warrants were drawn in his favor and in favor of his deputies. On one occasion a United States mail plane was wrecked some ten miles from the county seat. The sheriff went to the wreck and stood guard for several hours. For this he billed the county and received $10. On another occasion the sheriff was paid $75 for delivering ballots to various election officials and he and each of his deputies were paid $25 for delivering notices of election. We find no statutory authority for him to do this work.

No attempts seem to have been made to charge for the use of- the sheriff’s automobile or those of his deputies on a mileage basis. For example in testifying about the airplane wreck the sheriff said, “It was about ten miles over to where the airplane wreck was, although I went out there early in the morning and like to froze myself to death. Question: You charged $10.00 for that? Answer: That is it. Question: That was $1.00 a mile if you were just being paid for miles? Answer: I couldn’t say about that. Question: Well, were you being paid — Answer: For my services. . . . Question: And you tried not to charge any certain rate per mile, but what you thought was reasonable for your services and expenses? Answer: That is right, absolutely. Sometimes I got it and sometimes I didn’t.” Again he said with reference to the same occasion: “Anybody knows that it did not take $10 to drive out there, but I still say I earned my money. ’ ’

One deputy testified, “I tried to charge reasonable expenses. Sometimes 5 cents a mile would take care of expenses and sometimes it would not. On exhibit number one in January, 1935, I submitted a bill for $4 for attending the B.olekow Picnic. I don’t remember what work I did there. It is about twenty miles to Bolckow. However, I might have gone somewhere else, too. ’ ’ Another deputy testified that he talked to the court and told them: “We could not make these calls. That we were all poor boys and could not afford it. The court later agreed to pay our expenses;” that he thought the bills submitted were reasonable. On cross-examination he said: “Question: Now then, how much per mile did you charge when you made a trip? Answer: I didn’t have any definite rate. However, I did try to keep my bill within a certain limit. Question: What limit? Answer: I thought $75.00 was plenty for me. Question: Then you did not try *163 to maintain your bills or make your charge at any definite rate per mile, but tried to hold yourself to around $75.00 per month? Answer: That is right.”

The record does not contain all of the items paid to the sheriff and his deputies but it does show that from October, 1934, to December, 1935, the sheriff personally received $1281.50 on bills of the kind mentioned, and that during the sanie period one deputy received $1147.20.

Shortly before the present suit was filed the county court had taken the position with the sheriff that it was entitled to recover back the money paid to him and his deputies. For this reason the present declaratory judgment action was filed seeking a judicial determination of nonliability. At first Maxwell was the only plaintiff, but in an amended petition the surety on his official bond joined with him. The second amended petition, upon which the case was tried, prays for a declaration that the above mentioned payments for the sheriff and his deputies were lawfully made and that Maxwell was entitled to retain the money.

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Bluebook (online)
146 S.W.2d 621, 347 Mo. 156, 1941 Mo. LEXIS 525, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/maxwell-v-andrew-county-mo-1941.