Sanders v. Brooks and Oberhelman

183 S.W.2d 353, 238 Mo. App. 485, 1944 Mo. App. LEXIS 223
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedOctober 2, 1944
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 183 S.W.2d 353 (Sanders v. Brooks and Oberhelman) 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
Sanders v. Brooks and Oberhelman, 183 S.W.2d 353, 238 Mo. App. 485, 1944 Mo. App. LEXIS 223 (Mo. Ct. App. 1944).

Opinion

DEW, J.

This is an action in equity to annul, and to enjoin the enforcement of, a judgment for rent rendered by a Justice of the Peace. A general demurrer was filed by respondents to appellant’s petition in equity on the ground that the same did not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action. The demurrer was sustained by the trial court. Plaintiff, appellant herein, refused to plead further, whereupon judgment was rendered, dismissing the cause. Plaintiff has appealed.

The petition involves two other lawsuits, in which the position of the parties as plaintiffs and defendants was different from their position in the instant case. For the purpose of clarity, the parties will be referred to hereinafter, when necessary, by their respective names and act by their party designations.

The petition in the equity ease, which is the one before us for consideration, is of great length, and, with the omission of many of its statements of conclusions, alleges, in substance as follows:

That A. F. Oberhelman at all times mentioned was and is a Justice of the Peace within and for Clay Township, Lafayette County, Mis *489 souri; Clelia Brooks is tbe party in whose favor a judgment was rendered against Harry Sanders in the court of said defendant Justice of the Peace; that said suit was presented on a statement of account for rent to Clelia Brooks in the amount of $60; that said statement was amended to set out further description of the premises involved, but contained no allegations of ownership, right, title, or possession of said premises; that on April 25, 1943, said justice case came on for hearing before defendant Justice of the Peace, at which Sanders presented a plea in abatement and in bar of said action in that the total of the claim and demand was already pending on appeal in a previous action; that the action before defendant Oberhelman constituted a multiplicity of suits before the same parties in the same cause of action, thereby being vexatious; that said pleading in bar was made also on the ground that said cause of action had previously been presented as a counterclaim in a previous action in a justice court between the same parties, had been considered by the court in said previous action, and was a component part of a judgment rendered therein, which previous cause was then pending on appeal in the circuit court of said county; that proof in support of said plea in abatement and in bar was offered by Sanders, uncontradicted by Clelia Brooks, nor was the jurisdiction of the prior court challenged ; that nevertheless defendant Oberhelman refused to abate said action, or to declare the same barred by the former adjudication; that Sanders did thereupon file a motion to continue the hearing, stating to said justice that he had- relied on the assumption that the cause' would be abated, by reason whereof he had not come prepared to offer a complete defense; that said Oberhelman immediately overruled said motion and ordered the trial to proceed; that- Sanders then filed motion before said justice to the effect that Clelia Brooks was not the proper party plaintiff, and that she had no cause of action against Sanders, and setting forth that if there were any cause of action that it would be a cause of action of Sydney Brooks, or the cause of action of Clelia Brooks and Sydney Brooks jointly, wherefore Sanders asked said justice that the service be quashed and the case dismissed, or that the court should add Sydney Brooks as an additional party co-plaintiff, further setting out as reason therefor that the only agreement ever made for the use and occupancy of the premises involved was entered into with Sydney Brooks, who had represented himself to Sanders as the owner of said land, and that Sydney Brooks was the only one to whom Sanders ever made attornment, and the only one who ever appeared to exercise any authority or control over the premises; that said plea before the justice set out further that a contract with Sanders had been entered into with Sydney Brooks concerning said premises, and included the rent and use of other lands to which the aforesaid Sydney Brooks claimed ownership, as to which part of said contract Sydney Brooks had failed of perform *490 anees by not putting Sanders in possession of said other lands; that said plea before said justice further stated that Sanders had a counterclaim against Sydney Brooks growing out of the same transaction, and that unless the latter be made party coplaintiif, the matters involved in the same transaction could not all be settled in one action.

That said plea in bar before the justice also averred that Clelia Brooks was not the owner of the-premises for the rent of which the suit was brought, but that Sydney Brooks was the sole owner thereof.

That Sanders introduced in evidence before the justice, in support of said motion, a certified copy of a recorded warranty deed showing that Clelia Brooks had parted with title to said property fourteen years previously, whereby Sydney Brooks was and for thirteen years prior to the contract with him aforesaid, had been a record owner of said premises; that Clelia Brooks offered no evidence contradicting said evidence in support of the plea in abatement, but nevertheless Oberhelman refused to quash the service,, to dismiss the action, or to make Sydney Brooks a party coplaintiff.

That in support of said plea and motion Sanders showed the justice that the claim and demand for rent had been previously presented in the prior action as a joint counterclaim by Clelia Brooks and Sydney Brooks, and Sanders urged before the justice that Clelia Brooks was estopped to plead a cause of action which was a joint one with Sydney Brooks and to sue thereon as a cause of action accruing to her alone; that as to said plea of estoppel Clelia Brooks offered no contradiction, but that nevertheless Oberhelman overruled the same and totally disregarded uneontradieted proof thereof.

That Harry Sanders, being thereupon forced to trial in said justice case, filed his answer, denying that he owed Clelia Brooks anything and denying every other allegation of her statement.

That Clelia Brooks was the first witness in said case before Oberhelman, the Justice of the Peace; that in the midst, of her cross-examination by counsel for Sanders, Justice Oberhelman interrupted said counsel, declaring that he had heard enough, that he would not permit the cross-examination to continue further, and that he was then and there rendering judgment for Clelia Brooks; that said judgment was thereupon rendered, thus “ turning the defendant out of court altogether to the accompaniment of boisterous acclaims of the plaintiff and Sydney Brooks”, albeit that Sanders had a meritorious defense in any court where he would receive the benefit of due process of law.

That Sanders thereupon filed a motion with Justice Oberhelman, asking the court to declare a mistrial, “affirm” a discontinuance of the cause, and to make an entry suggesting the nullity of the judgment so that Sanders might more expeditiously have the same set aside in the Circuit Court, all of which Justice Oberhelman refused and failed to do. That Justice Oberhelman was without authority or jurisdiction to render judgment except after a hearing upon the mei’its in which *491

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Bluebook (online)
183 S.W.2d 353, 238 Mo. App. 485, 1944 Mo. App. LEXIS 223, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sanders-v-brooks-and-oberhelman-moctapp-1944.