State Ex Rel. City of St. Louis v. Priest

152 S.W.2d 109, 348 Mo. 37, 1941 Mo. LEXIS 681
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedJune 12, 1941
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 152 S.W.2d 109 (State Ex Rel. City of St. Louis v. Priest) 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. City of St. Louis v. Priest, 152 S.W.2d 109, 348 Mo. 37, 1941 Mo. LEXIS 681 (Mo. 1941).

Opinion

*43 HAYS, J.

Action by the State at the relation of the City of St. Louis on the official bond of the Clerk of the Circuit Court for the Eighth Judicial Circuit. The clerk and his surety are defendants. A verdict for the defendants was directed. The relator took an involuntary nonsuit, moved ineffectually to set it aside and appealed to this court. The record facts are these:

Early in 1927 there was pending in the St. Louis Circuit Court a condemnation proceeding against certain landowners whose *44 property was desired by tbe city for a new plaza. As provided by laAV, the city sought and obtained an assessment of special benefits against lands in the improvement area not taken or damaged in the making of the plaza. Judgment for these benefit assessments was rendered March 7,1927. Under Sections 1038 and 1278, R. S. Mo. 1939, the power of the city to cause executions to be issued on this judgment would automatically expire ten years after its rendition, that is, upon March 7, 1937, unless the judgment had been revived by scire facias or kept alive by part payment. The judgment provided that special executions might be issued against the various tracts of land involved upon motions filed therefor by the city and after a showing had been made that funds to pay condemnation damages had been appropriated. The city took no steps whatever toward enforcing its judgment until March 2,1937. As March 7,1937, fell on Sunday, this left only four days of the life of the judgment during which the necessary procedure for issuing the executions could be taken. On March 2nd the city filed motions in the division of the circuit court which had rendered the original judgment, requesting special executions against forty-six separate tracts of land. These motions were accompanied by a certified copy of an ordinance appropriating money for the payment of the condemnation damages. On March 5th similar motions were filed for twenty-one more special executions. These were also filed in the division in which the original judgment had been rendered. All of the motions were sustained. At each time, and before leaving the divisional court room, counsel for the city wrote out and handed to the deputy clerk in that division a memorandum of the minute entry to be made in the record of the court showing the action of the judge in sustaining the motions.

The office of the circuit clerk is situated upon another floor of the court house from that on which is found the court room in which these proceedings were had. In that office the clerk kept, as he was required to do, an order book in which praecipes for processes of various kinds, including executions, are entered. Counsel for the city did not enter an order in this book on March 2nd, the day on which his first motions were sustained, nor did he, in leaving the court house, even go to the clerk’s office. He did not at that time orally or in writing instruct the clerk or any of his deputies to issue the desired executions. On March 3rd, the day following the action of the court on the first forty-six motions, counsel wrote a letter to the clerk requesting that executions be issued in these forty-six instances. Likewise on March 5th counsel made no entry in the order book asking for the twenty-one additional executions adjudged on that day, but again contented himself with writing a letter, received by the clerk on the following day, requesting their issuance. Neither of these letters was introduced in evidence and it is not contended that in either of them counsel stated that the Statute of Limitations was *45 about to run on Ms judgment nor that any other special emergency or reason for unusual haste existed.

None of the executions were issued on or before the 6th of March. Shortly thereafter they were prepared. The attorney for the city did not call at the clerk’s office to get these executions, but they were delivered by the clerk directly to the sheriff. The first issued were originally made returnable to the April Term. However, it appeared that they could not be served and sales had thereunder in time for return at that term and, at the request of the city’s attorney, they were amended and made returnable to the June Term. The rest of the executions were originally made returnable to the June Term. All were placed in the hands of the sheriff in sufficient time for him to levy them, have sales thereunder and make returns at such term.

The execution defendants filed motions to quash on the ground that the process was not issued until the life of the judgment had expired. These were sustained.

In passing on the propriety of the action of the trial court in directing a verdict for the defendants, we have in mind the well-established rule that the court must consider as true all of the evidence favorable to the plaintiff, disregarding that evidence which is favorable to the defendants where any conflict exists. [State ex rel. Sirkin Company v. Hostetter, 340 Mo. 211, 101 S. W. (2d) 50; Becker v. Aschen, 344 Mo. 1107, 131 S. W. (2d) 533.] We must also draw from the evidence all reasonable inferences of fact favorable to the plaintiff. [6 Encyc. of Pleading and Practice, 442.]

The breach of defendant clerk’s bond, here assigned, is allegedly negligent failure to issue these executions on or Uefore March 6th. The clerk of a circuit court is an administrative officer, whose functions are largely ministerial in character. Where the law specifically enjoins upon him the performance of certain actions which he negligently performs, he is liable on his bond to the person injured by his negligence. [Mechem, Public Officers, sec. 667.] But. negligence on the part of an officer consists only in a failure to use that degree of care which an ordinary reasonable and prudent man would exercise under the same or similar circumstances and conditions. A reasonable effort to perform the duties pertaining to such office is all the law requires. [Sharp v. Brown (Idaho), 221 Pac. 139.] The law presumes the reasonable performance of official duty and the burden is upon the person claiming neglect to show that the conduct of the officer has actually been negligent. [Mechem, Public Officers, see. 677.] Moreover, as stated by Meehem, supra, sec. 680: “It is equally true that if the result complained of would have followed, notwithstanding their (the officers’) misconduct, or if the injured party himself contributed to the result in any degree by his own fault or neglect, they cannot be held responsible. If the position of the injured party would have been just the same had not the alleged *46 misconduct occurred, he has no legal ground of complaint; and if his own conduct or the conduct of his attorney contributed to the result, he is in pari delicto, and the law leaves him where it finds him.” In this connection it is well to remember that in a case founded upon the alleged negligence of the defendant, if the evidence of the plaintiff himself shows contributory negligence, a verdict should be directed. [Hafner v, St. Louis Transit Co., 197 Mo. 196, l. c. 201, 202, 94 S. W. 291; Bruce v. United Railways Co., 181 Mo. App. 93, 163 S. W. 548.] Due diligence on the part of the clerk, of course, requires that he perform such acts as he is required to perform by law with reasonable celerity and within a reasonable time. [Randol v. Garoutte, 78 Mo. App. 609; 22 R. C. L. 461.]

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Bluebook (online)
152 S.W.2d 109, 348 Mo. 37, 1941 Mo. LEXIS 681, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-city-of-st-louis-v-priest-mo-1941.