State ex rel. Nolte v. McQuillin

151 S.W. 444, 246 Mo. 586, 1912 Mo. LEXIS 205
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedDecember 10, 1912
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 151 S.W. 444 (State ex rel. Nolte v. McQuillin) 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. Nolte v. McQuillin, 151 S.W. 444, 246 Mo. 586, 1912 Mo. LEXIS 205 (Mo. 1912).

Opinion

BROWN, J.

Mandamus to compel the respondent as judge of the circuit court of St. Louis City, to settle, sign and file a bill of exceptions, in a cause appealed to this court.

The proceedings which led up to the issue of our alternative writ are as follows:

On March 17, 1911, and during the March term, 1911, of the probate court of St. Louis City, the relator, Louis Nolte, in his official capacity as'sheriff of St. Louis City, filed an information in said court under the provisions of Secs. 474 and 477, R. S. 1909, alleging that one Clara E. Taylor, a resident of said city, was a person of unsound mind and incapable of managing her affairs.

Upon the filing of said information a jury was duly impaneled by said court, which jury, after hearing the evidence, returned a verdict sustaining the allegations of said information. Only ten of the jurors concurred in the verdict. Judgment was rendered on said verdict declaring the said Clara E. Taylor to be a person of unsound mind and incapable of managing her affairs.

During the said March term of said probate court, Clara E. Taylor filed therein her motion to set aside the verdict of the jury; whereupon said probate court made an order reciting the filing'of said motion and [590]*590further reciting that the court “not being fully advised of and concerning same, doth take time to consider thereof.”

No further action was taken by the probate court in said proceeding until July 10, 1911, on which day it entered an order setting aside the verdict of the jury so returned on March 17, 1911, and granting said Clara E. Taylor a new trial.

On July 13, 1911, relator Nolte filed in said probate court an affidavit and bond for appeal from the order of said court granting a new trial. The appeal 'was accordingly granted to the circuit court of St. Louis City and assigned to the division of said circuit court over which respondent presides.

On October 2, 1911, said Clara E. Taylor filed with respondent a motion to dismiss the aforesaid appeal from the probate court, on the ground that “no appeal lies in the circumstances of this case, the order granting the same being improvidently and erroneously made,” and “because the order setting aside the finding and verdict of the jury was not a final determination of the matter in the probate court and no appeal would lie from the same. ’ ’

On November 17, 1911, respondent, as judge of said circuit court, sustained said motion and dismissed the appeal; but for some reason not recited in relators’ petition, respondent on December 1, 1911, set aside and vacated its -order dismissing relators’ appeal, and reinstated the motion to dismiss on his docket.

On January 5, 1911, the motion to dismiss was again sustained, and relators’ appeal dismissed.

On January 18, 1911, relator Nolte filed in the circuit court what he designates as a “petition” and affidavit for appeal to this court from the order and judgment dismissing his appeal from the probate court. The allegation's of this “petition” for appeal will be noted in our opinion.

[591]*591On February 2, 1912, relator Edward M. Taylor •also filed with respondent a “petition” for appeal, in which he describes himself as the husband of the aforesaid Clara E. Taylor, and for that, and other reasons, claimed the right to prosecute an appeal from ihe respondent’s order dismissing the appeal granted hy the probate court.

The conclusions we have reached render it unnecessary to decide whether Edward M. Taylor possessed any right to interplead or otherwise inject himself into this litigation.

Pursuant to relator Nolte’s petition and affidavit for appeal from, the circuit court, the respondent on February 3, 1912, granted him an appeal to .this court, and also granted him ten days in which to prepare, have signed, and file his bill of exceptions.

Respondent in his return recites that relator Nolte prepared and presented to him a bill of exceptions within the time granted and allowed for that purpose, "but that before said bill of exceptions was settled, signed and filed, respondent was served with a preliminary writ of prohibition issued by the Honorable' :St. Louis Court of Appeals, which writ prohibits said respondent from taking any further action in the matter of said information against Clara E. Taylor until ihe further order of said Court of Appeals.

Respondent in his return further states that he is willing to comply with our alternative writ,- and allow, sign, seal and file the bill of exceptions as prayed "by relators, provided he can do so without violating ihe writ of prohibition issued by the St. Louis Court of Appeals, which said writ of prohibition is still pending and undetermined in said Court of Appeals. "Wherefore, respondent prays us to determine whether •or not said writ of prohibition constitutes good cause why he should not allow, sign and file .said bill of «exceptions.

[592]*592Upon the filing of respondent’s return, relators, move for a judgment on the pleadings.

I. Upon the face of the pleadings we are requested to compel the respondent to violate a writ of prohibition issued hy the St. Louis Court of Appeals^

As a ground for this unusual demand, relators, insist that said Court of Appeals has no jurisdiction to hear or determine the appeal granted by respondent, and consequently, under the ruling of this court in State ex rel. v. Nortoni, 201 Mo. l. c. 24 to 29, the writ, issued by the said Court of Appeals is void. They contend that hy reason of certain constitutional questions inserted by relators in their “petition for appeal” the St. Louis court of Appeals is deprived of jurisdiction to hear and determine the appeal, and is therefore without power to control or interfere with the appeal by its writ of prohibition.

Relators do not contend that any constitutional question was raised while the original cause was pending in the probate court, hut assert that(the dismissal hy respondent of the appeal taken from said probate court violates the following provisions of the Constitution of Missouri:

Section 10, article 2, providing that courts shall he open to every person, etc.; section 30, article 2, guaranteeing due process of law, and sections 22 and 23,. article 6, granting to circuit courts jurisdiction of appeals from and supervising control over probate courts.

A constitutional question cannot legally be injected into a cause appealed from the probate court,, where no such issue was presented at the trial in such court.

A very similar question was presented to ns in In re Strom’s Estate, 213 Mo. 1; and in that case, this, court speaking through Gantt, J., said:

[593]*593“It is elemental in tins State that on appeal from a probate conrt or a justice of the peace, the circuit conrt must try the case- anew upon the same cause of action that was tried in the probate court or in the justice’s conrt. It is obvious that the two constitutional questions imported into the case presented entirely new issues in the circuit court, issues which the probate court was not allowed to pass on, and this change of the cause of action, so to speak, was. unauthorized. The appeal could not give the circuit court greater jurisdiction than the probate court had, or change the course of that appeal' from the St. Louis Court of Appeals to this conrt.”

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
151 S.W. 444, 246 Mo. 586, 1912 Mo. LEXIS 205, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-nolte-v-mcquillin-mo-1912.