State ex rel. Buckner v. Ellison

210 S.W. 401, 277 Mo. 294, 1919 Mo. LEXIS 25
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedMarch 15, 1919
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 210 S.W. 401 (State ex rel. Buckner v. Ellison) 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
State ex rel. Buckner v. Ellison, 210 S.W. 401, 277 Mo. 294, 1919 Mo. LEXIS 25 (Mo. 1919).

Opinions

WILLIAMS, J.

—This is an original proceeding by certiorari, which seeks to quash, on the ground that it conflicts with controlling previous decisions of this court, an opinion of the Kansas City Court of Appeals in the case of State ex rel. Akin, relator, v. Buckner, respondent. The opinion in the above case is published in 203 S. W. 242. Hon. Thomas B. Buckner, the relator [297]*297in the ease at bar, was respondent in that case, and is the Judge of Division One of the Cirenit Court of Jackson County, Missouri.

The case in which the Kansas City Court of Appeals delivered the alleged conflicting opinion was an original proceeding in prohibition which sought to prohibit Judge Buckner from taking further judicial action upon a motion then pending before him, which prayed the correction of a judgment of said circuit court by order, nunc pro tunc.

The Court of Appeals held that Judge Buckner was without jurisdiction to proceed in the matter then pending before him and ordered that the preliminary rule in prohibition be made absolute.

Thereafter Judge Buckner, as relator, instituted the certiorari proceeding here.

The facts stated in the opinion of the Court of Appeals which throw light upon the proceeding then pending in the circuit court, may be summarized as follows:

One William H. Akin, as plaintiff, instituted in said circuit court an action for damages against the Sidney Steel Scraper Company and Samuel B. Strother, administrator of the estate of one Tomlinson, deceased, as defendants. The action for damages proceeded to final judgment.

The memorandum entered upon the judge’s docket in the handwriting of Judge Buckner, who tried the case, was as follows:

“William H. Akin v. Tomlinson and Sidney Steel Scraper County. Walsh. & L. Conrad, S. & W. December 5, 1916. At close of case court directs a verdict for defendant Sidney Steel Scraper Company. Plaintiff dismisses as to S. B. Strother, Adm’r.”

The minutes kept by the clerk of the circuit court were as follows:

“76663 — Akin v. Sidney Steel Scraper Company, et al.
[298]*298“By leave of court, plaintiff amends petition by reducing tbe amount sued for to $7,500. Defendant, Sidney Steel Scraper Company, excepts.
“Plaintiff dismisses as to Samuel B. Strotber, administrator of estate of J. C. Tomlinson, deceased.
“At close of plaintiff’s evidence, under instructions given by tbe court, tbe jury returned tbe following verdict, to-wit:
“ ‘We, tbe jury, find tbe issues for tbe defendant, Sidney Steel Scraper Company.
“ ‘H. A. Kelly, Foreman.’
“Judgment accordingly.”

Tbe judgment entered by tbe clerk was as follows:

“Now on this day again come tbe parties in this cause, and also comes the jury herein, and now plaintiff, by leave of court, amends bis petition by reducing tbe amount sued for to seventy-five hundred dollars; to which action in permitting said defendant, Sidney Steel Scraper Company, excepts.
“And now plaintiff dismisses this cause as to defendant, Samuel B. Strotber, administrator of the estate of J. C. Tomlinson, deceased.
“Wherefore, it is ordered and adjudged by tbe court that this cause be, and tbe same is hereby dismissed as to defendant, Samuel B. Strotber, administrator of tbe estate of J. C. Tomlinson, deceased, and that tbe said defendant have and recover of and from plaintiff bis costs herein, and have execution therefor, and at tbe close of plaintiff’s evidence, under tbe instruction given by tbe court, tbe said jury returned tbe following verdict, to-wit:
“ ‘We, tbe jury, find tbe issues for tbe defendant,' Sidney Steel Scraper Company.
“ ‘H. A. Kelly, Foreman.’
“Wherefore, it is ordered and adjudged by tbe court that plaintiff take nothing by this suit and that defendant, Sidney Steel Scraper Company, have and recover of and from plaintiff its costs herein and have execution therefor.”

[299]*299Akin, the plaintiff therein, appealed from said judgment, and the appellate court, holding that the circuit court had erred in giving the peremptory instruction, reversed the judgment and remanded the cause for trial.

After the mandate of the appellate court had reached the circuit court, said Sidney Steel Scraper Company, the then sole remaining defendant in said cause, filed a motion in said circuit court, asking for an order nunc pro tuno changing or transposing the record judgment so that the portion showing a dismissal as to Strother, Admr., would appear after that portion which showed a directed verdict for the defendant, Sidney Steel Scraper Company, so that (as contended by the movement) it might speak the truth and be in conformity with the memoranda upon the judge’s docket.

In substance the Court of Appeals held:

(1) That the judgment entered upon the record by the clerk of a court of record is presumed to be the judgment rendered by the court and such presumption cannot be qualified by the recollection of the judge or witnesses.
(2) That there is nothing in the judge’s docket to overcome the above presumption.
(3) That respondent (Judge Buckner, the relator here) under the facts shown was without jurisdiction to determine the matter and should be prohibited from taking further action therein.

Question ofEvidence. of I. Upon a careful review of the matter it would appear that the learned judges of the Court of Appeals may have fallen into the error of treating the case as though a review of the proceeding before the circuit court were before them upon appeal.

The question of the sufficiency of the evidence presented upon the hearing before the circuit court was, however, not properly before the appellate court for discussion. Upon its proceeding by writ of prohibition [300]*300it was concerned merely with the question of whether or not the circuit court had jurisdiction to hear and determine, in the first instance, the matter then pending before it. The question of the sufficiency of the written evidence to support the requested order nunc pro tunc was not a jurisdictional question in the proper sense, hut a question which would involve nothing more than-the interpretation and application of a strict rule of evidence, applicable to hearings upon motions for orders nunc pro tunc.

That the sufficiency or insufficiency of the minutes, in a.judge’s docket, to justify the court in correcting its record by an order nunc pro tunc, is a question of evidence rather than one of jurisdiction, is we think clearly apparent from the language employed in previous rulings of this court.

In the early case of Jones v. Insurance Co., 55 Mo. 342, l. c. 344, it was said:

“Since this case came here by an appeal, an amendment nunc pro tunc of the judgment originally entered was made in the circuit court, correcting, errors in the original entry made by the clerk.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
210 S.W. 401, 277 Mo. 294, 1919 Mo. LEXIS 25, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-buckner-v-ellison-mo-1919.