State Ex Rel. Gagnepain v. Daues

15 S.W.2d 815, 322 Mo. 376, 1929 Mo. LEXIS 615
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedMarch 27, 1929
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 15 S.W.2d 815 (State Ex Rel. Gagnepain v. Daues) 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. Gagnepain v. Daues, 15 S.W.2d 815, 322 Mo. 376, 1929 Mo. LEXIS 615 (Mo. 1929).

Opinion

*380 ATWOOD, J.

This is a certiorari proceeding in which relators seek to quash the opinion and judgment of the St. Louis Court of Appeals in the case of Nora Gagnepain, Charles Tucker and Barbara Litters v. Levee District No. 1 of Perry County, Missouri, a corporation, John Devenyns, Vincent J. Rola and Pat Esselman.

Counsel for respondents say that the abstract filed by relators is fatally defective in that it does not contain the motion for rehearing, the writ of certiorari or the return of the judges of the St. Louis Court of Appeals, and that our writ should be quashed. Our rule 33 relating to procedure as to original writs contains this provision: “On final hearing printed abstracts and briefs shall be filed in all respects as is required in appeals and writs of error in ordinary cases.” We have held that the rule applies to this class of certiorari proceedings, and if no abstract is filed the writ will be quashed. [State ex rel. Paine v. Trimble, 290 S. W. (Mo.) 132; State ex rel. Egan v. Trimble, 291 S. W. (Mo.) 468.] Rule 13, applicable to ordinary cases and hence applicable to this ease, provides that the abstract “shall set forth so much of the record' as is necessary to a complete understanding of all the questions presented for decision. Where there is no controversy as to the pleadings or as to deeds or other documentary evidence it shall be sufficient to set out the substance of such pleadings or documentary evidence. . . . Pleadings and documentary evidence shall be set forth in full when there is any question as to the former or as to the *381 admissibility or legal effect of the latter; in all other respects the abstract must set forth a copy of so much of the record as is necessary to be consulted in the disposition of the assigned errors.” In State ex rel. Hirsch v. Allen, 274 S. W. (Mo.) 353, we held that filing a purported abstract in a certiorari proceeding which did not set out the opinion of the Court of Appeals was not a compliance with Rule 13. This holding is sound because the purpose of such a proceeding is to determine whether or not the decision of the Court of Appeals contravenes “the last previous rulings of the Supreme Court on any question of law or equity,” and obviously such purpose cannot be accomplished without consulting the opinion. But the abstract duly served and filed in this case sets out the opinion of the St. Louis Court of Appeals, as well as parts of the abstract of the record filed in that court which counsel for relators presumably deemed pertinent to the conflicts alleged in their petition for writ of certiorari, and also recites that relators had previously “filed in the Supreme Court 15 printed copies of their petition for writ of certiorari herein — which said petition is accompanied with a certified copy of said decision, a copy of relators’ motion for rehearing, a certified copy of the order of the Court of Appeals overruling said motion for rehearing and proof of service of notices on Judges of Court of Appeals and counsel for defendants,” which recital is borne out by our own record. One of the functions of an abstract of the record is to expedite the work of the court and, as we have said in State ex rel. Wallace v. Lincoln, 274 S. W. (Mo.) 677, the time of the judges should not be “frittered away in examining and assorting a mass of typewritten documents, . . . for the purpose of gathering and compiling therefrom such of the record facts as are necessary to a complete understanding of all questions presented for decision.” To insure our consideration of matters deemed pertinent to the alleged conflict of opinion relators should have included within the covers of their printed abstract all matters “necessary to a complete understanding of all the questions presented for decision” and proper for us to consider in such a proceeding, but in view of the facts that we have never undertaken to prescribe in detail just what such an abstract must contain, that relators’ abstract does contain respondents’ opinion and other pertinent matter including a reference to printed copies of relators’ petition and exhibits filed, and that this proceeding is for the purpose of determining whether or not respondents’ decision contravenes our last previous rulings, we think relators have substantially compiled with our rules and the writ of certiorari should not be quashed on account of the alleged failure. Looking to the opinion and pleadings referred to therein for a statement of the case we find that the action was one for damages in the sum of $4,000’ against defendant levee district and three individual defendants assumed to be the directors of said *382 district for their action in raising a street located upon and adjacent to plaintiffs’ land by constructing a levee thereon; that the court sustained a demurrer to the petition, and plaintiffs failing to plead further judgment of dismissal was entered from which plaintiffs have appealed; that plaintiffs’ petition alleged that said district was organized in Perry County, Missouri, under the provisions of Chapter 101, Revised Statutes 1889, and was acting under Article X of Chapter 28, Revised Statutes 193.9; that plaintiffs own certain lots situated in that part of the incorporated town of Clearyville known as West Chester, with buildings located thereon and used for hotel purposes; that as the owners of said lots plaintiffs were also the owners of all beneficial uses in the street in front of the same except those held by said town for street purposes; that in 1925 defendants constructed a levee embankment about six feet high on Front Street in said town and immediately in front of plaintiffs’ said property; that prior to the construction of said levee the grade of said street was slightly lower than the surface of plaintiffs’ lots affording good drainage and means of ingress and egress thereto; that the construction of the levee as aforesaid has deprived plaintiffs of all beneficial use in said street; that vehicles cannot now enter plaintiffs’ said property from said street or park in front or within a reasonable distance thereof; that said embankment is steep and constructed of sandy soil which becomes very dusty in dry weather and during heavy rains sediment therefrom flows into plaintiffs’ property; that said embankment has impaired the drainage of plaintiffs’ lots, destroyed the view from plaintiffs’ hotel property of the Mississippi River and of the city of Chester, Illinois, and in summer prevents the circulation of cool air through plaintiffs’ buildings; that said' district has never secured any right of way from the town of Clearyville or from plaintiffs over and along said street, but “wrongfully and unlawfully entered upon said street and erected said embankment without any authority or right whatsoever,” and “that defendant wholly refused to treat with plaintiffs with regard to the damages so done to their property as aforesaid, or to have such damages thereto assessed.” The petition prayed for damages in the sum of $4000 “by reason of said acts of defendants as aforesaid, in so raising said street and embankment.”

The demurrer was to the effect that the petition does not state facts sufficient to' constitute a cause of action because said levee district “is but a governmental agency created to perform a work of general public utility and it is not subject to a suit or liable for damages in this action.”

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Bluebook (online)
15 S.W.2d 815, 322 Mo. 376, 1929 Mo. LEXIS 615, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-gagnepain-v-daues-mo-1929.