Miller v. Breneke
This text of 83 Mo. 163 (Miller v. Breneke) 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.
Opinion
This is an action of ejectment, tried by the court sitting as a jury.. Petition is in the usual form of an'action of ejectment. The answer tendered the general issue, and further pleaded matter of defence in the nature of an estoppel, and the statute of limitation. The court found the issue for the plaintiff, and rendered judgment accordingly. Prom this judgment the defendant prosecutes this appeal.
On the trial the defendant made some objection to the admissibility of certain evidence, but even this objection was not preserved in the motion for a new trial. No instructions were asked by either party, nor were any declarations of law made by the court. It is, therefore, manifest that there are no errors presented in this record for this court to review. It has been repeatedly held that under the present practice act, when the circuit court tries a case like this, sitting as a jury, the Supreme Court will not weigh the evidence, and determine whether or not the finding of the trial court was correct on the .evidence. This it will only do in an action in equity, or on an agreed statement of facts. The only way in an action like this, where there are no exceptions to evidence saved at the trial, to have a review of the decision of the lower court, is to ask declarations of law applicable to the facts of the case. The giving or refusal of instructions is the only way this court can ascertain the theory on which the court tried and determined the matter at issue. As is aptly said by Wagner, J., in Weilandy v. [166]*166Lemuel, 47Mo. 322 : “The court in trying issues of fact, sits as a jury and gives a general verdict; and the only way in which its errors can be corrected, if it decides the law wrongfully, or makes a misapplication of the law to the facts, is to ask declarations of law or instructions, in order that we may see on what theory the court proceeded. To attempt to review this case would be simply giving our opinion upon the weight of the evidence, when no point of law was raised or saved in the trial court. Tin's we cannot do.” This ruling is supported by a long line of decisions. Altum v. Arnold, 27 Mo. 264; Conran v. Sellew, 28 Mo. 320; Easley v. Elliott, 43 Mo. 289; Wilson v. Railroad Co., 46 Mo. 36; Harrison v. Bartlett, 51 Mo. 170 ; Cunningham v. Snow, 82 Mo. 587.
While we are strongly impressed with the belief that on the evidence and the law properly applied, the finding of. the court should have been for the defendant; yet as there was evidence on the part of the plaintiff on which the verdict might have rested, we cannot undertake to pass on the weight of the evidence and the credibility of the witnesses. That belongs exclusively to the province of the jury, or the court when sitting as a jury.
It follows that the judgment of the circuit court must be affirmed.
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83 Mo. 163, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/miller-v-breneke-mo-1884.