State Ex Rel. Dean v. Douglas

165 S.W.2d 304, 236 Mo. App. 1284, 1942 Mo. App. LEXIS 216
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedNovember 4, 1942
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 165 S.W.2d 304 (State Ex Rel. Dean v. Douglas) 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
State Ex Rel. Dean v. Douglas, 165 S.W.2d 304, 236 Mo. App. 1284, 1942 Mo. App. LEXIS 216 (Mo. Ct. App. 1942).

Opinion

*1287 ANDERSON, J.

— This is an original proceeding in mandamus to compel the respondent, as clerk of the Circuit Court of St. Louis County, to pay oyer to relator, out of a fund or deposit held by said-clerk in a condemnation suit, the sum of $1000 found by the court to be due relator.

The undisputed facts as disclosed by the petition for the writ and return thereto are as follows:

At the September Term, 1941, of the Circuit Court of St. Louis County, the City of Ladue filed an action to condemn several parcels of land formerly owned by Campbell Glenn, deceased.

The property involved in the suit had been devised by will to Sarah Glenn for life with remainder to her heirs at law. After the death of Campbell Glenn, Sarah Glenn conveyed her life estate in said property to the United Railways of St. Louis, a corporation,, by a deed dated' December 5, 1899, and title to said life estate in said property. is now held by mesne conveyances in the name of the St. Louis Public Service Company, a corporation.

Plaintiff named as parties defendant to said suit the said Sarah Glenn and the St. Louis Public Service Company, as well as certain individuals, apparently the owners of a contingent remainder in said land, listed as Robert A. Glenn, Robert C. Glenn, Robert Joseph Glenn, Jane Glenn Shubert, and Lester Shubert. Plaintiff also named as party "defendant relator herein, a lessee of the premises under lease from the St. Louis Public Service Company.

Commissioners were appointed in said suit in accordance with the statutes in such cases made and provided to assess the damages to the owners. . Their report, filed November 14, 1941, awarded damages for the taking of all of said land in the total amount of $21,300, but did not allocate the damages as between the defendants. As to the parcel on which relator’s buildings are located, the award was in the lump sum of $9280. The plaintiff thereafter paid into the registry of the court said $21,300.

Thereafter a stipulation was entered into by and between defendant St. Louis Public Service Company on the one hand and the defends ants, Sarah Glenn, Robert A. Glenn, Robert C. Glenn, Robert Joseph Glenn, and Jane Glenn Shubert on the other, that the defendant Sarah Glenn should receive out of the award the sum of $11,500; that defendant St. Louis Public Service Company. should have and receive the sum of $300 on account of the taking of that portion of said land in which it owned a life estate; and that the remainder of said total *1288 award, $9500, should be paid to defendant Robert A. Glenn, subject to the provisions of the will of Campbell Glenn, deceased.

Thereupon defendant Robert A. Glenn filed a motion in said cause, to which he attached said stipulation, and in which he prayed that the court enter its order directing the clerk of said court to pay out the award in accordance with the said stipulation, after determining the sum, if any, ‘that Hazel Dean, relator herein, was entitled to receive.

Thereafter, on orders made pursuant to this stipulation, and upon the uncontested motion of Sarah Glenn, $11,500 of the fund was paid to Sarah Glenn, and $300 was paid to the St. Louis Public Service Company, leaving the sum of $9500 in the registry of the court to be disbursed to the parties entitled thereto.

Thereupon defendant Hazel Dean, relator herein, filed an interplea in which she alleged that in the year 1927 she caused to be erected on the premises a certain frame structure, thirty-two feet by thirty-two feet, which she used as a restaurant and waiting room for patrons of the defendant St. Louis Public Service Company, and that she owned on said premises another building fifteen feet by fifteen feet, which she used as a storeroom in connection with the operation of said larger building, and that the reasonable value of said buildings at the time of the filing of the plaintiff’s petition was the sum of $2000. She further averred that she had enjoyed a large lucrative business which she would have continued to enjoy but for the condemnation of her said buildings by the plaintiff in said suit. The prayer of her inter-plea asked that the court hear evidence and award to each defendant such sum as the court should find fair and reasonable as compensation for the property condemned, and that the court make an appropriate order touching the distribution of said award.

The defendants Robert A. Glenn, Robert C. Glenn, Robert J. Glenn, Jane Glenn Shubert, and Lester Shubert filed their joint answer to said interplea, in which answer they admitted that the property upon which Hazel Dean, relator herein, operated a restaurant, under lease from the St. Louis Public Service Company, was appraised by commissioners appointed by the court, and that said commissioners made an award in the sum of $9280, as damages for the taking of the property sought to be condemned by plaintiff, which said award was for the property alleged.to have been leased by said defendant Hazel Dean, together with other property. Said answer also contained a general denial.

A trial was .had on the issues raised by said interplea and answer, and resulted in a finding in favor of interpleader, Hazel Dean, relator herein, and the assessment of her damages in the sum of $1350. The court thereupon ordered that said interpleader Hazel Dean be allowed and paid the sum of $1350 as her proportionate share of $9280 theretofore awarded and paid into court bj7 plaintiff for damages to said *1289 interpleader and other defendants. , Costs were assessed against the plaintiff.

The defendants Robert A. Glenn, Robert C. Glenn, Robert J. Glenn, Jane Glenn Sh.fi.bert, and Lester Shubert thereupon filed a motion for new trial on said interplea. Said motion was argued and submitted, and the court thereafter entered its order that said motion would be sustained on the ground that the finding assessing damages was excessive, unless the said Hazel Dean would remit the sum of $350 within five days, and that if said remittitur was made, the motion would be overruled. Said remittitur was thereafter made and the motion was overruled.

On August 1, 1942, defendants Robert A. Glenn, Robert 0. Glenn, Robert Joseph Glenn, Jane Glenn Shubert and Lester Shubert took an appeal without bond to this court from said judgment in favor of Hazel Dean. The term of court at which the appeal was taken expired on September 19, 1942. Thereafter the relator Hazel Dean made demand on the clerk of said court, respondent herein, for the $1000 so awarded her in said judgment, but respondent refused to turn over to her said sum. Relator thereupon presented to this court her petition for mandamus.

We issued our alternative writ, to which respondent made return, which after alleging the facts as we have heretofore detailed them, further alleged that under the law Hazel Dean, relator herein, was not entitled to receive payment of said sum of $1000 until her claim upon which said award was based was finally adjudicated on appeal.

The sole question presented for determination is whether or not an appeal without bond operates as a supersedeas, where the fund over which the parties litigate is deposited in the registry of the court.

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Bluebook (online)
165 S.W.2d 304, 236 Mo. App. 1284, 1942 Mo. App. LEXIS 216, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-dean-v-douglas-moctapp-1942.