State ex rel. Lynch v. Taylor

166 S.W. 1071, 183 Mo. App. 441, 1914 Mo. App. LEXIS 498
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedMay 5, 1914
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 166 S.W. 1071 (State ex rel. Lynch v. Taylor) 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. Lynch v. Taylor, 166 S.W. 1071, 183 Mo. App. 441, 1914 Mo. App. LEXIS 498 (Mo. Ct. App. 1914).

Opinion

REYNOLDS, P. J.

On application of Harry P. Lynch, an alternative writ of prohibition issued out of this court, addressed to the Honorable Wilson A. Taylor, one of the judges of the circuit court of the city of St. Louis, presiding in division number 7 thereof, commanding him, pending the determination of the cause in our court on the application for prohibition, that he proceed no further with and take no further steps in the case then pending in his court in which one J. R. Harkins, doing business under the style and firm name of J. R. Harkins Agency Company, is plaintiff and the above named Harry P. Lynch is defendant, being cause No. 85469, pending in division number 7 of that court, as it is said, and that he should show cause, if "any he has, why he should not be absolutely prohibited from further proceeding in that cause.

It is set out in the álternative writ issued out of our court that it appears that Judge Taylor had permitted to be filed, or refiled, a motion to set aside a certain judgment rendered by him in that cause at the December, 1913, term of the court, this or a substitute motion having been refiled, subsequent to the term at which that judgment was rendered, and that Judge Taylor now has the latter motion under submission for determination, and proposes to pass upon it. Attached to the alternative writ and made a part thereof is the petition upon which the writ was issued. From this it appears that in a certain action by the above-named J. R. Harkins, doing business under the style and firm name of J. R. Harkins Agency Company, instituted by him against Harry P. Lynch before a justice of the peace of the city of St. Louis, judgment went against plaintiff on his demand and in favor of [445]*445defendant, relator here, on his counterclaim. Prom that plaintiff appealed to the circuit court, giving the required bond. • Thereafter and on the 16th of December, and at the December, 1913, term of the circuit court, the cause on appeal from the justice having been assigned to division number 7, was docketed for trial on the 16th of December, 1913. On that day, the cause being called for trial, plaintiff failed to appear and prosecute his appeal, whereupon the circuit court entered up judgment affirming- that of the justice. Thereafter on the 12th of January, 1914, and during the December term of the court at which the judgment of the justice had been affirmed, plaintiff in the cause filed his motion to set aside the affirmance of the judgment of the justice. This motion went over to the February, 1914, term.

On the 6th of March, 1914, and during the February term, defendant filed affidavits in opposition to the motion to set aside the affirmance of the judgment of the justice. Plaintiff filed no affidavits in support of his motion and thereafter on the 16th of March, and during the February, 1914, term of the court, plaintiff’s motion was overruled.

Ten days thereafter, to-wit, on the 26th of March, but during the same February term of the court, plaintiff in the cause was granted three days within which to refile a motion to set aside the judgment of a ffirm - anee of the justice. In the meantime execution had issued on the judgment.

Afterwards, and on the 27th of March, still during the February, 1914, term of the court, plaintiff, under the leave as above, filed this, a second motion, verified by him, to set aside the affirmance of the judgment of the justice. Along with this motion plaintiff filed his affidavit to the effect that he has a just and lawful claim against H. P. Lynch for the sum of $238.75 on an account, of which a copy, containing 290' items, it is affirmed is attached, and that he owed defendant [446]*446nothing’. Upon the filing* of this motion, the court recalled the execution. This motion was not acted upon at the February term of court and went over to the April term.

It is averred in the petition for the writ that when this last motion to set aside the order affirming the judgment of the justice came up, evidently in the April term, the .honorable circuit judge had stated in open court “that he would sustain said motion so filed by plaintiff, J. R. Harkins, on the 27th of March, 1914, (if he could).”

On being served with- the alternative writ, the Honorable Wilson A. Taylor made his return, in which he specifically denied the allegation last above set out, averring that “at no time did he say that he would sustain said motion so filed by plaintiff, J. R. Harkins, on the 27th of March, 1914 (if he could), but that what respondent did say was ‘that as there had never been any adjudication of plaintiff’s right on the merits, the motion to set aside the default ought to be sustained provided the respondent was justified in sustaining said motion under the law.’ ” The respondent further suggests in his return “that the application made by relator for a writ of prohibition herein was prematurely made, in that the respondent at no time stated, or otherwise indicated to relator that he would sustain said motion so filed by plaintiff, J. R. Harkins, on the 27th day of March, 1914, and that respondent does not now know what action will be taken by himself as the presiding judge of division number 7 of the circuit court, in the event that he is permitted to further hear and pass upon said motion. ’ ’ The return is verified by the circuit judge.

It was conceded at the hearing of argument on the ease that the return sets up a true version of what the respondent had said. Whether conceded or not, as there is no denial of the return but practically a motion [447]*447for a peremptory writ, notwithstanding the return, the averments of the return are to be taken as true.

Some criticism is made as to the first motion being vague and the second being on new and other grounds. That, we think, is a matter for the consideration of the trial court. He gave leave to file a new motion; if the motion filed was not within the leave granted, it was, and yet is, a matter for his own judicial determination. He has not yet acted on it. We cannot say what his action will be. It would be beyond our province, in this proceeding, to direct him as to what action he should take. He has a right to act on it, even to act wrongly, if it is within his judicial power to act on the motion at all.

There is but one question necessary for our determination; that is, has the circuit court jurisdiction over the cause by reason of the pendency of the motion of the plaintiff in the cause to set aside the judgment affirming the judgment of the justice? The other question, whether on the action by the court on that motion, sustaining or overruling it, either party can appeal, is not necessarily here involved and we decline to consider it.

We have, in setting out the facts, said that we assume that the original motion to vacate the judgment of affirmance, filed at the term at which that judgment was rendered, had been continued from term to term and is now pending in the present, the April term of the court, if that term is still open. This, on the authority of Harkness v. Jarvis, 182 Mo. 231, 81 S. W. 446, and Meyer v. Meyer, 158 Mo. App. 299, l. c. 305, 138 S. W. 70. That is the effect even of the decisions cited by counsel for relator, namely, Phillipi v. McLean, 5 Mo. App. 587, and Stocke v. Albert, 8 Mo. App. 577, in each case this court holding that the fact that the trial court had passed upon motions at a term subsequent to that at which they were filed, raised the [448]*448presumption that the cause had been carried over to that term by proper continuances.

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Bluebook (online)
166 S.W. 1071, 183 Mo. App. 441, 1914 Mo. App. LEXIS 498, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-lynch-v-taylor-moctapp-1914.