State ex rel. Snow Steam Pump Works v. Homer

155 S.W. 405, 249 Mo. 58, 1913 Mo. LEXIS 60
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedMarch 28, 1913
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 155 S.W. 405 (State ex rel. Snow Steam Pump Works v. Homer) 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. Snow Steam Pump Works v. Homer, 155 S.W. 405, 249 Mo. 58, 1913 Mo. LEXIS 60 (Mo. 1913).

Opinion

GRAVES, J.

A short statement will suffice in this case. In November, 1909, the Texas Portland Cement Company, a corporation of West Virginia, sued the International Steam Pump Company, a corporation of New Jersey, and the Snow Steam Pump Works, a corporation of New York, in the circuit court of the city of St. Louis. [State ex rel. v. Sale, 232 Mo. l. c. 169.]

In this case pending in the said court the defendants specially appeared and moved to quash the service. These motions were sustained May 26, 1910, and on the next day the plaintiff in that case filed a motion to compel the defendants in that case to plead to its petition. This motion the court overruled, and on June 28, 1910, the plaintiff in the circuit court case, as relator in this court, applied for a writ of mandamus to compel the Hon. Moses Sale, then judge of the circuit court, to proceed with the case. Our alternative writ issued, to which Judge Sale made his return. The further situation of the mandamus case is thus outlined in State ex rel. v. Sale, 232 Mo. l. c. 171, thus:

[64]*64“Relator filed a motion for judgment upon the pleadings, so that the case stands here upon the admissions made in the return. Respondent Sale seeks the judgment of this court upon the merits, and to that end there is presented the sole question of the sufficiency of these returns. Other questions are discussed in the briefs, but were waived in the oral argument at request of respondent, who deemed the question presented upon the returns as a very important one to the circuit court of the city of St. Louis, where many such suits are pending and others being continually brought. This outlines therefore the sole issue in the case.”

In this condition the mandamus case in this court was submitted, and we then determined that the returns upon the summons in the circuit court showed a valid service of process, and our peremptory writ of mandamus was awarded directing the circuit court to proceed with the case. Pursuant to this mandate the circuit court assumed jurisdiction and was proceeding with the case, when the defendants in the circuit court applied for and obtained a preliminary rule in prohibition, so that the real question is whether such rule should be made absolute.

As a further statement a few preliminary facts should be made clear. In the mandamus case the same lawyers who represented the defendants in the circuit court appeared and argued the case for Judge Sale in this court. Not only so but whilst the mandamus case was pending in this court Judge Sale telegraphed that he desired the case determined upon its merits so that the court might know whether such returns were good, and to that end he waived all other questions in his return. To this request of Judge Sale the counsel for Judge Sale, now; the counsel for the rela-tors in the present case, .consented in open court. It was under these circumstances that’we determined the mandamus case, with the result above indicated.

[65]*65Mandamus Adequate Remedy. I. For several reasons we think this writ of prohibition should be denied. It is true that in the mandamus case we only considered one • question. It is true that we did not then discuss the question as to whether a writ of mandamus would properly lie to compel the court to proceed in the circuit court case under all the facts disclosed and admitted. It is true that the mandamus will not issue to compel a court to decide a case in any certain way. It is further true that mandamus cannot be invoked to compel the doing of a thing which has already been done. ^he 'writ has been granted to compel the undoing of a thing wrongly and improperly done, which thing precluded a determination of a case upon its merits. [State ex rel. v. Phillips, 97 Mo. 331.] Nor will mandamus usually issue where there are other adequate remedies, but in the light of this rule the other remedies or remedy must be fully adequate. The mere fact that there might be another remedy is not sufficient to preclude the use of the writ of mandamus. The other remedy must be adequate, and whether it is adequate is one appealing to the judgment and discretion of this court when the circumstances of each case are laid before us. And we say now that it is not clear that we were not fully justified in issuing our Writ of mandamus in the Sale case, supra, upon all grounds of the return being considered. The circuit court had in a way determined its jurisdiction over the defendants in the circuit court case, but its determination was upon, admitted and undisputed record facts. Whether that court had jurisdiction of the defendants thus became a pure question of law. It may be that an appeal or some such remedy was at hand, but was that remedy adequate? Under the facts we could have well said that it was not.

[66]*66Mandamus: Sufficient Return: Question of Law. But aside from this there is much respectable authority to the effect that mandamus is the only proper remedy where a circuit court refuses to proceed with a case, because the court was of opinion that it did not have jurisdiction of the cause, or of the parties to the cause. In the circuit court case the trial court refused to entertain jurisdiction and proceed with the case upon a preliminary objection to the return of service to the process. In the very early case of Castello v. St. Louis Circuit Court, 28 Mo. l. c. 274, we had up a very similar question. The question there was whether a notice of contest in a contested election case was sufficient to give the circuit court jurisdiction to hear and determine the case upon its merits. The circuit court held the notice insufficient and refused to proceed further with •the case. This court issued its alternative writ and then proceeded, to determine whether or not the trial court was right or wrong in refusing to proceed further. We held that the trial court was right and that the notice was insufficient, and denied the peremptory writ for that reason, but in the course of the opinion we thus spoke upon the question in issue here:

“Upon the facts disclosed in the petition in this ease for a mandamus upon the circuit court, a majority of this court determined that a conditional mandamus should be awarded, and it was accordingly so ordered. This determination was based upon the principal that where an inferior judicial tribunal declines to hear a case upon what is termed a preliminary objection, and that objection is purely a matter of law, a mandamus will go, if the inferior court has misconstrued the law. The cases of the King v. The Justices of the West Riding of Yorkshire, 5 Barn. & Adol. 667, and Rex v. The Justices of Middlesex, 5 B. & Ad. 1113, The King v. Hewes, 3 Ad. & Ellis, 725, and Regina v. The Recorder of Liverpool, 1 Eng. [67]*67Law & Eq. R. 291, are believed to be conclusive upon this point so far as the English authorities go; and our attention had not been directed to any American cases conflicting with this view of the law. If the circuit court declined to go into the merits of the case because the party complaining had not given the notice required by the statute, that was a preliminary objection upon a point of law which this court can review upon a writ of mandamus; and if the circuit court called for a notice which the statute did not require, the mandamus ought to be made peremptory.

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Bluebook (online)
155 S.W. 405, 249 Mo. 58, 1913 Mo. LEXIS 60, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-snow-steam-pump-works-v-homer-mo-1913.