Wiltshire v. Triplett
This text of 71 Mo. App. 332 (Wiltshire v. Triplett) 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.
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This is an action of forcible entry and detainer for the recovery of certain premises in Kansas City. The cause was brought before a justice of the peace, where on trial plaintiffs recovered. Defendants [336]*336thereupon appealed to the circuit court, but when the case was there called they failed to appear, in person or by attorney, the judgment of the justice was affirmed, and this the court refused to set aside on defendants’ motion and they appealed.
By t-he use of the above italicized words, “in substance,” it is contended that the complaint was fatally defective and conferred no jurisdiction, either on the justice of the peace before whom the case originated or the circuit court to which the same was appealed. This contention is based on a ruling of this court in Reilly v. Powell, 34 Mo. App. 431, where a similar affidavit was held to be insufficient. In Tegler v. Mitchell, 46 Mo. App. 349, a like affidavit, though said to be defective, was yet permitted to be amended in the circuit court, and the latter case was followed and approved fin Dean v. Trax, 67 Mo. App. 517. This authority to amend we thought given by the terms of section 5159 found in the chapter of the revised statutes relating to forcible entry and detainer.
If then the complaint under discussion, though defective, was yet amendable in the circuit court, we can not under the circumstances of the case treat it as an absolute nullity. “Judicial proceedings which are amendable are notvoid. Hardin v. Lee, 51 Mo. 241, and [337]*337cases cited. Amendability in such cases is the experimenkim crucis of legal validity.” Rosenheim v. Hartsock, 90 Mo. 357. And since, as the record shows, defendants failed at every stage of the case — in the justice’s court and in the circuit court — to object to this defective affidavit, they must be held as having waived such irregularity; it is too late now to make such complaint. They should have done this when the action was pending below and while there was an opportunity to amend. This court will not assist defendants in quietly passing over such irregularities while there is an opportunity to correct them, and then spring a trap for the first time when the case gets here. The record shows that no such objection was raised at any stage of the proceeding below, not even in the motion for new trial or in arrest. Indeed it seems never to have been thought of until this appeal was taken.
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71 Mo. App. 332, 1897 Mo. App. LEXIS 471, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wiltshire-v-triplett-moctapp-1897.