Sheehan & Loler Transportation Co. v. Sims

36 Mo. App. 224, 1889 Mo. App. LEXIS 266
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedMay 14, 1889
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 36 Mo. App. 224 (Sheehan & Loler Transportation Co. v. Sims) 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
Sheehan & Loler Transportation Co. v. Sims, 36 Mo. App. 224, 1889 Mo. App. LEXIS 266 (Mo. Ct. App. 1889).

Opinions

Thompson, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

This action was before the court on a former appeal. 28 Mo. App. 64. It was originally brought against James T. Sims as sole defendant. The original petition contained two counts. The first was for services rendered in towing barges for the defendant. The second was upon a judgment obtained by the plaintiff in the circuit court of the city of St. Louis, jointly against the defendant Sims and one Rogers. The plaintiff dismissed his action as to the first count and took judgment upon the second count, and the defendant appealed to this court. This court, holding that a second action might be maintained upon the judgment, nevertheless reversed the judgment, because the original, judgment [229]*229which was the foundation of the second count of the petition, being a judgment against the defendant Sims and Rogers jointly, could not be the foundation of an action against Sims separately. Upon the cause being remanded to the circuit court, the plaintiff filed an amended petition, wliich in substance reinstated the first count of its original 'petition which it had dismissed. The defendant Sims filed an answer to this amended petition and ,th,e.plain tiff filed a reply, thus joining issue on the'.answer. The defendant Rogers did not defend or appeal'.

I. Thereafter, when the cause was called for trial, the defendant Sims presented a motion in writing to strike out the first count of the amended petition, for reasons which we shall not recite in detail, but which in substance were that such an amendment was not admissible after the cause had been remanded by this court to the circuit court. The court overruled this motion to strike out. The trial resulted in a verdict and judgment for the plaintiff and the defendant Sims again appeals to this court. The first error which he assigns is the overruling of this motion. It is clear that no error was committed in this ruling, for two reasons. (1) The motion to strike out should have been made before the defendant answered, and came too late when the case was called for trial. Spurlock v. Railroad, 98 Mo. 530, 537. (2) The motion was also bad in substance. There is no rule of procedure which cuts off an amendment of the pleadings, otherwise proper, after the cause has been remanded by an appellate court. It is the constant practice to allow such amendments, and an amendment restoring an abandoned count in the petition was recommended by this court in the case of Grant v. Reinhart, 33 Mo. App. 74.

II. One paragraph of the answer filed to the amended petition after the cause was remanded by this court consisted of a plea in abatement on the ground of privilege. This plea set up in substance that the [230]*230defendant Sims was a non-resident of this state, and that he was served with summons in this action while attending as a defendant on the trial of another action at law in the circuit court of the city of St. Louis, in which he was sole defendant. This plea in abatement would not have been bad, as the respondent argues, but would have been good in law, if it had been taken in limine and if it had not been waived. Christian v. Williams, 35 Mo. App. 297. But in this case, it was so clearly waived that the attempt to plead in abatement on this ground in the amended answer seems scarcely less than a trifling with the administration of justice. The defendant Sims had appeared by counsel in-the action; had filed a demurrer to the petition on grounds other than jurisdictional; had entered into a stipulation concerning certain substantial steps in the cause; had appealed from the judgment which was rendered against him to this court; had appeared in this court by counsel and secured a reversal of that judgment; and had, after this reversal and before filing his answer to the amended petition, given notice to take depositions. All these facts were proved to the jury by the record, and there was not, and could not have been, any countervailing evidence. There was therefore really no issue on this plea in abatement to try. The circuit court judicially knew the facts shown by its own record in the particular case, and this part of the answer, raising this plea of privilege at this late stage of the proceedings, might have been stricken out on motion. The trial of it was mere supererogation, and any error or irregularity committed in the trial of it could not therefore have been prejudicial to the defendant. This assignment of error, that the court did not try the plea in abatement separately, is, therefore, not well taken.

Nor is it material that the jury made no finding in respect of this issue, because they could have made but one finding, and that might have been directed by the [231]*231court on the evidence, and it must have been against the defendant; and we will not reverse the judgment, on the defendant’s appeal, in order to have such a find-' ing made. Nor is it any error of which the defendant can complain that the court, after having admitted evidence on this issue without objection, refused all instructions bearing upon it. All of them that were tendered by the defendant were erroneous, because the records of the court showed, as a mere conclusion of law, that the claim of privilege had been waived.

III. The next assignment of error is that the court should have given an instruction in the nature of a demurrer to the evidence at the close of the plaintiff’s case. This contention is grounded upon the fact that it came out in evidence that the services which were the subject of the first count in the petition were the same services for which the judgment, which was the subject of the second count in the petition, had been rendered. But it is to be said that the defendant Sims, in one of the paragraphs of his answer, pleaded that this judgment was void, for the reason that, when the action which resulted in it was commenced, he was a non-resident of the state of Missouri, and had never been served with process therein, and had never appeared therein by counsel or otherwise, and had no notice of the proceeding until long after the judgment had been rendered. He did not, however, set up in his answer, as res adjudicates, that the demand which was the subject of the first count in the petition was the same demand which was the subject of this judgment, though he did allege the fact. He did not do this for the obvious reason that he could not in his answer take the contradictory positions that this judgment, which was the foundation of the second count, was mid because it had been rendered against him without service of process and without any appearance on his part, and that it was at the same time [232]*232good so far as to constitute an estoppel against prosecuting in the first count the demand which was the foundation of that judgment. But while he could not take these inconsistent positions in his answer, he endeavored to have the court take them for him at the end of the plaintiff’s case, by an instruction for a non-suit. This he could not do. He had taken the position that the judgment was void, and he could not recede from that position and claim that it was valid, for the purpose of using it as an estoppel against the prosecution of the first count in the petition.

But if there had been any error in this ruling, it was cured by what subsequently took place at the trial. It appeared from the defendant’s evidence that he had never authorized the counsel who professed to appear for him in the action, which resulted in the judgment, so to appear.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
36 Mo. App. 224, 1889 Mo. App. LEXIS 266, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sheehan-loler-transportation-co-v-sims-moctapp-1889.