State ex rel. Fenn v. Riley

105 S.W. 696, 127 Mo. App. 469, 1907 Mo. App. LEXIS 523
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedNovember 18, 1907
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 105 S.W. 696 (State ex rel. Fenn v. Riley) 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. Fenn v. Riley, 105 S.W. 696, 127 Mo. App. 469, 1907 Mo. App. LEXIS 523 (Mo. Ct. App. 1907).

Opinion

GOODE, J.

One of the judges of this court in vacation, issued a preliminary writ of prohibition to respondents prohibiting them, and each of them, from further proceeding or entertaining jurisdiction in a certain cause pending in the circuit court of New Madrid county, wherein Bert E. Fenn, Robert g. Rutledge, M1. W. Powell, administrator of the estate of Mal H. Powell, deceased, J. O. More and T. W. Corley, are defendants, and to show cause before this court at the October term why the rule of prohibition should not be made absolute. The respondents appeared and showed cause by their several returns to the preliminary writ, to which the petitioner has filed demurrers. The petitioner Bert F. Fenn, is an attorney residing in the city of gt. Louis. The respondent James V. Conran, is an attorney residing in the city of New Madrid, the respondent Henry C. Riley, is judge of the circuit court of New Madrid county and the respondent J. H. Bishop, is judge of the probate court of said county. On August 3, 1907, James V. Conran instituted a suit for an injunction in the circuit court of New Madrid county against the parties whose names we have given, to-wit; Robert S. Rutledge, Bert F. Fenn, M. W. Powell, administrator of the estate of M. H. Powell, deceased, J. O. More and T. W. Corley. As the circuit court of New Madrid county was not in session at the'time nor the judge of it within said county, Conran applied to the Hon. J. H. Bishop, judge of the probate court for a preliminary writ of injunction, and on Conran’s filing an injunction bond in the sum of |5,000, the writ was granted and the papers certified to the circuit court of the county, where the cause is still pending. It appears from the return of Judge Bishop, that the only knowledge he had regarding the merits of Conran’s cause of action was what appeared in the petition for an injunction. However, notice of the application for the writ had been given to the defendants in the suit against whom the writ was [472]*472granted, or some of them. It further appears from said return that Judge Bishop had no connection with the matter except to grant the preliminary writ, which was returned with the bond to the clerk of the circuit court as provided by the statutes. [R. S. 1899, secs. 3628, 3629.] It appears from Judge Riley’s return that he had issued no orders, nor taken any steps in the injunction suit at the time of the filing of the petition for the writ of prohibition. The suit was simply pending in the New Madrid circuit court, to be taken up in due course of business and disposed of according to law. Prom the petition filed in this court by Penn for the writ of prohibition, and the petition filed by Conran in the circuit court of New Madrid county for the writ of injunction, we gather all the facts pertinent to the present controversy which are before us. These facts are intricate and, as presented to us, obscure. Conran’s petition in his injunction suit recites that in the year 1903, he and Mal H. Powell (who was a woman and is noAV deceased) had certain business transactions and that the same were evidenced by a contract AArhich is in the possession of Penn; that on June 10, 1903, a new transaction took place which superseded the prior one, and on said date Mal H. Powell executed and delivered to Conran a quitclaim deed, conveying lands in New Madrid county and Pemiscot county, and on the same day Conran executed and delivered to Mal H. Powell a contract in Avriting which is now in the possession of Penn; that thereafter, from time to time for almost a year, Mal H. Powell accepted the benefit of the contract of June 10th Avith the full knowledge of Penn, Avho was her confidential friend and legal adviser ; that some time in 1904 she and Penn being in need of money, made a demand on Conran for the payment of sums Avhich he did not owe; that thereafter Penn tried to coerce Conran to pay such sums by threats, and by stating that Conran had forged a deed on June 10, 1903, and making similar charges; that having failed to ex[473]*473tort money from Conran by threats, Mal H. Powell and Penn instituted two suits before a justice of the peace in the city of St. Louis, one for $200 and one for $55; that the actions were tried with the result that judgment was given in both of them for Conran and an appeal taken in one which is now pending in the circuit court of the city of St. Louis. The nature of those actions is not disclosed. Conran’s petition in the injunction suit then proceeds to recite various suits, perhaps four or five others, instituted by Fenn and Mal H. Powell against him in the courts of St. Louis, and also the procurement of an indictment against him. Said petition further recites the institution of actions by Conran against Fenn in the circuit court of New Madrid county, and the filing of a criminal information against Fenn and Mal H. Powell by the prosecuting attorney of said county, charging ihem with criminal slander, of which they were found guilty on the trial in the circuit court, but the judgment was reversed by this court. It is further stated in Con-ran’s petition for injunction that he had instituted a certain other suit against Fenn and Mal H. Powell in New Madrid county, in three counts; one for slander, one “for conspiracy to defraud and indict” Conran, and one for malicious prosecution; that this action went to Ste. Genevieve county on change of venue, where it was tried and judgment obtained by Conran on the counts for slander and conspiracy, he taking a nonsuit on the count for malicious prosecution, but afterwards instituting another action on said ground. It is further stated in the petition for injunction that Fenn and Mal H. Powell appealed from the judgment of the Ste. Genevieve Circuit Court on the counts for slander and. conspiracy, to the Supreme Court, where the cause is now pending.After alleging these various suits and counter-suits and criminal charges, the petition for injunction avers that on July 10, 1907, Fenn filed, another action against Con-ran in the circuit court of the city of St. Louis for slan[474]*474der, which action is still pending. The general purport of Conran’s petition is that the different actions instituted against him by Penn and Mal H. Powell, and subsequently by the administrator of Mal. H. Powell, were malicious and devoid of merit, and are maintained for the purpose of annoying and harassing him, and to extort money from him. It is further charged that the defendant Robert S. Rutledge, an attorney of New Madrid, county, and H. 0. More an attorney of St. Louis, are confederates of Penn in these various proceedings to harass and annoy Conran.and extort money from him. Corley was made a party on an allegation that he was a notary public, and that Penn and his confederates were about to harrass Conran by talcing depositions before said notary in the slander suit which Penn had instituted in the circuit court of the city of St. Louis, on July 10, 1907. It is further alleged that Penn and Rutledge and the other defendants in the injunction suit, would harass Conran by other malicious actions and legal proceedings, unless they were restrained. It is alleged also that the issues involved in Penn’s slander suit against Conran are identical with those involved in the action which Conran instituted against Penn, and were adjudicated by the judgment of the circuit court of Ste. Genevieve county in said case of Conran against Penn and Mal H. Powell; which case is now pending in the Supreme Court.

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Bluebook (online)
105 S.W. 696, 127 Mo. App. 469, 1907 Mo. App. LEXIS 523, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-fenn-v-riley-moctapp-1907.