Priddy v. Hayes

102 S.W. 976, 204 Mo. 358, 1907 Mo. LEXIS 73
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedMay 29, 1907
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 102 S.W. 976 (Priddy v. Hayes) 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
Priddy v. Hayes, 102 S.W. 976, 204 Mo. 358, 1907 Mo. LEXIS 73 (Mo. 1907).

Opinion

WOODSON, J.

This is one of the eight cases-mentioned and referred to in the ease of Priddy et al. v. MacKenzie et al., decided at the present term, 205 Mo. 181.

This case and that one were, by stipulation of counsel, argued and submitted together. Prior to making that stipulation, counsel, in writing, agreed that this and the following seven cases might be argued together and submitted, to-wit: Priddy et al. v. Kendall et al.; Priddy et al. v. Beals et al.; Priddy et al. v. McDearmond et al.; Priddy et al. v. Tomb et al.; Priddy et al. v. Rosecrans et al.; Priddy et al. v. Bayles et al.; Priddy et al. v. Merrill et al.

The case at bar and the above-mentioned cases are the eight cases mentioned in the MacKenzie case which were consolidated by the trial court, and all were tried together, at the same time, over the objections and exceptions of the plaintiffs.

All the pleadings, issues and facts in each of these cases are the same as those in the MacKenzie case, excepting the names of the defendants and the description of the land involved in each; and the statement of the facts in that case is hereby referred to [361]*361and adopted as the facts in these cases, as far as they go; but there are some additional matters in these cases which do not exist in that one, or which were unnecessary to be stated in the disposition thereof. Said additional facts are as follows:

The decision was rendered July 17, 1903, and motions for new trial and in arrest were filed on the next day and overruled by the court, and leave was granted plaintiffs to file bills of exception on or before the 3rd day of the October term, 1903, and the time for filing said bills was duly extended by the court, and the last extension was leave to file the bills on or before December 5, 1903. None of these extensions were asked for or granted at the instance of the plaintiffs, but were made in order to give the court and counsel for defendants more time in which to prepare and endorse upon the bills the reason for the court’s refusal to allow and sign them. At first the only reason assigned for such refusal, and that was orally made, was because those furnished by plaintiffs did not contain all the evidence, in the case regarding the merits.

The pi "intiffs contended the trial court had no jurisdiction to try the cases, and that they wished to appeal for the purpose of having that point alone settled by this court, a.nd that under that view of the cases the evidence touching the merits was wholly immaterial, and that they should not be compelled to pay the costs and expenses of preparing and printing the voluminous records therein, which aggregate more than twenty-five thousand pages; and for those reasons refused to incorporate into the bills said evidence, which constituted the greater part of the records.

Later, the court formulated additional reasons for ■ its declination. So, on December 4, plaintiffs filed in each of said cases a motion, asking for an extension of time in which to file said bills. The grounds assigned by plaintiffs in said motions were that the time, was [362]*362about to expire and that they had not been informed of the character of the objections entertained, if any, and their rights to bills would be lost through no fault of theirs unless an extension was granted.

On the next day, December 5th, this motion was taken up for consideration, and the following, substantially, occurred:

When the court opened, the bills were lying upon the bench, in front of the court, with the court’s written objections^ endorsed thereon, or attached thereto. Counsel for plaintiffs requested permission of the court to examine the bills and the objections thereto before said motion for an extension of time was passed upon. The court refused this request. Plaintiffs then requested the court to inform them the nature of the objections endorsed upon the bills, which was by the court refused.

Plaintiffs then, through their counsel, requested the court to permit them to examine said objections in the presence of the court in order that they might know the nature of same, and to make, if possible, such amendments or alterations of the bills as would cause them to conform to the court’s objections. This request was also refused, and the court then and there ordered the clerk to file the objections with the bills of exceptions attached thereto, and when so filed to take them and seal them with sealing-wax, and keep them under lock and key until further ordered. The plaintiffs duly excepted to the action of the court in refusing each and all of said requests. The court also overruled plaintiffs’ motion asking for an extension of time for filing the bills, to which ruling plaintiffs duly excepted. Sometime after the bills had been filed in open court, plaintiffs’ counsel was permitted to examine the objections endorsed upon the bills and found that the bills could be amended so as to comply with ten or twelve of them, and they offered to make the alterations in[363]*363stanter, but the offer was by the court refused. The plaintiffs also found several other objections, based upon the absence of the testimony which was introduced on the merits of the cases, which they refused, as before stated, to incorporate into the bills, on account of its immateriality to the question raised, and because of the great cost that would be entailed upon them by having to print such a record, more than twenty thousand pages of which was directed to the merits alone, according to statements of counsel in the argument of these cases.

Plaintiffs also excepted to the ruling of the court in refusing to permit them to' amend the bills so as to make them, conform to the ten or twelve objections before mentioned.

On December 22, 1903, during the same term of said court at which it refused to sign plaintiffs’ bills of exceptions, and at which it filed its reasons or objections for not signing.them, plaintiffs’ counsel presented to the court a second lot of bills for allowance, excepting to the decision and' rulings of the court in refusing to sign the first lot of bills which were duly authenticated by the court, and one filed in each of these eight cases. The defendants, by counsel, objected and duly excepted to the action of the court in allowing and filing the second lot of bills, because the cases are ended and no authority exists to sign and file bills after the expiration of the time fixed for that purpose.

Sometime after the court’s refusal to allow and sign the first nine bills of exceptions, and after it had signed the second series, above mentioned, plaintiffs, at the relation of the State, instituted a mandamus suit in this court against Judge Gibson, requiring him to show cause why he should not be required to allow and sign the bill of exceptions which was presented by plaintiffs to him in the case of Priddy et al. v. MacKenzie [364]*364et al., and which he had refused to sign, which was at the same time he refused to sign the bills in these cases. This court, at the October term, 1904, awarded a peremptory writ in that ease and required Judge Gibson to allow and sign the bill of exceptions in that case as made and presented to him. [See State ex rel. v. Gibson, 184 Mo. 490.]

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Bluebook (online)
102 S.W. 976, 204 Mo. 358, 1907 Mo. LEXIS 73, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/priddy-v-hayes-mo-1907.