State Ex Rel. Horspool v. Haid

40 S.W.2d 611, 328 Mo. 327, 1931 Mo. LEXIS 612
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedJuly 3, 1931
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 40 S.W.2d 611 (State Ex Rel. Horspool v. Haid) 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. Horspool v. Haid, 40 S.W.2d 611, 328 Mo. 327, 1931 Mo. LEXIS 612 (Mo. 1931).

Opinion

WHITE, P. J.

Certiorari to the St. Louis Court of Appeals.

Samuel Jackson Forsythe recovered judgment against the relator, Henry J. Horspool, in the Circuit Court of the City of St. Louis for $3500. On appeal to the St. Louis Court of Appeals the judgment was affirmed. It is claimed by relator that the ruling of the Court of Appeals is in conflict with certain rulings of this court.

Forsythe was employed by Horspool as a carpenter in the construction of a dwelling house in the city of St. Louis and was injured by the collapse of a scaffold upon which he was working.

The opinion of the Court of Appeals sets out the allegations of the petition describing the manner in which the scaffold was constructed, alleging that it was made unsafe by being overloaded with shingles placed upon it by the defendant and thereby caused to fall. *330 The opinion then states that the answer pleaded contributory negligence in that the plaintiff himself erected the scaffold and made it unsafe.

I. The relator claims that a conflict with the rulings of this court appears on the facts stated in the opinion.

Respondents filed a supplemental abstract of the record setting out all the pleadings filed by the parties in the circuit court, together-with instructions which that court gave the jury, and in their brief refer to an alleged rule that when the instructions and documents in evidence are mentioned in an opinion of the Court of Appeals sent here on certiorari they become a part of the record and must be fully examined by us. They then argue that by the same token, when the opinion sets out part of the oral testimony upon which it is claimed the conflict arises, this court in the interest of justice should examine the whole of that testimony to determine whether there is a conflict with the rulings of this court.

Logically the respondents are in an unassailable position. There is no reason why this court should examine documentary evidence referred to in the opinion of the Court of Appeals and refuse to examine oral evidence. It is all written in the record presented to that court. There is no reason, if we must examine at length an instruction referred to in the opinion of the Court of Appeals, why we should not examine the evidence upon which the trial court saw fit to give that instruction. If we are compelled to examine a document produced in evidence in the trial court and referred to in the opinion of the Court of Appeals there is no reason why we should not, but every reason why we should, examine any other evidence before that court which might modify the effect of that document.

A writ of certiorari is not a writ of error. Its purpose is to preserve harmony in the laws as announced by the Court of Appeals and make them consistent with the rulings -of this court. We have no authority to go beyond the opinion of the Court of Appeals for that. Logically we should confine our investigation to what the opinion of the Court of Appeals contains. But if we should go outside the opinion and examine part of the record upon which that ruling was based we cannot consistently refuse to consider other parts of the record which might or might not authorize such a ruling.

While logically respondents are right, legally their position cannot be maintained. The case upon which respondents rely, State ex rel. v. Becker, 293 S. W. 783, divided 4 to 3, shows that this court, mistaking the number of decisions for the weight of authority, maintains the position that we can jump half way across a bottomless chasm and yet hope to land safe on the other side.

The opinion in the Becker case refers to State ex rel. v. Reynolds, *331 286 Mo. 204, where that aerial limit is drawn. The opinion in the Reynolds case, l. c. 216, says that this court “will not go beyond the opinion [of the Court of Appeals] to ascertain the facts.” The opinion then leaves us in doubt as to what is meant by the facts? The facts for us comprise the record before the Court of Appeals, the evidence documentary and oral, the instructions and the pleadings. Those are the facts. Then if we are limited to the opinion of the Court of Appeals to ascertain the facts we can only consider any of those things as the opinion recites them.

But the opinion in the Reynolds case then limits the rule as to the oral evidence, l. c. 217:

“The rule in the case cited [in relation to documents referred to in the opinion-] has never been applied to authorize the consideration in this court, on certiorari, of testimony of witnesses upon which a Court of Appeals founds its statement of facts any further than such testimony appears in the opinion.” (Our italics.)

And further, l. c. 221:

“The question before the Court of Appeals then was whether the proof conclusively showed deceased was guilty of such negligence as would bar his recovery. The question before us is whether that court’s ruling' that the facts it stated did not show contributory negligence as a matter of law conflicts with controlling decisions of this court.”

The opinion in the Becker case, l. c. 786, also places a limit in saying that a document referred to by the Court of Appeals does not demand our consideration unless it be the subject-matter of a ruling by that court. That is true in reviewing eases appealed from the court.

However, respondents here are not complaining of a conflict. On the contrary they assert the strict correctness of their ruling. They ask its to examine the entire record on which they placed the ruling and thus assure us that they did not sufficiently fortify their position by what they said in their opinion. They have misgivings that the opinion does not sustain itself. We cannot allow them thus to disparage the quality of their work. Since relator confines his complaints to the face of the opinion we must allows it to speak for itself. It states that there were certain objections to instructions, and said:

“We refer to them but it is unnecessary to set them out and unnecessarily burden this opinion.”

We cannot go beyond that, as respondents demand, and examine the instructions; that would require an examination of the evidence upon which such instructions were based, because no specific instruction is pointed out, nor the purport of one stated, and, besides relator does not complain of any instruction or pleading.

*332 II. The only points made by the relator turn upon the evidence, the question of its sufficiency to sustain a verdict. It is mentioned in the opinion, as follows:

“The evidence discloses that plaintiff received his injuries on the date mentioned in the petition. He was a carpenter, working on a building, and was engaged in placing shingles on said building. "While so placing these shingles lie was working upon a platform, or a scaffold, engaged at the time with another carpenter. The building was about thirty-two feet long, and the scaffold extended approximately along the entire length of the building.

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Bluebook (online)
40 S.W.2d 611, 328 Mo. 327, 1931 Mo. LEXIS 612, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-horspool-v-haid-mo-1931.