38 Mo. App. 623 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1890
This is a suit by attachment brought by plaintiffs before a justice of the peace in Bates county. At the trial before the justice the defendant filed his plea in abatement, which, on motion of plaintiffs was stricken out by the justice, for the alleged reason that defendant had waived the same by appearing to the action and taking depositions in the cause, etc. The justice thereupon made an entry in his docket sustaining the attachment, and proceeded with the action on its merits, rendering judgment in favor of the plaintiff for the amount of the note sued on. Eight days thereafter defendant filed his affidavit and bond and the cause was appealed to the circuit court.
In the circuit court plaintiffs moved the court to dismiss the appeal for the alleged reason that the same was taken solely from the determination of the plea in abatement in the justice’s court, when no such appeal is allowable under the laws of this state. The circuit court overruled this motion, and the court’s action thereon is now complained of here.
I. As the law existed prior to the revision of .1879, no appeal was provided from a judgment on a plea in abatement in attachment cases. Davis v. Perry, 46 Mo. 449; Walser v. Haley, 61 Mo. 445. But by section 439, Revised Statutes, 1879, the old section 42 of the attachment law was amended, providing a right of appeal for both plaintiff and defendant in such- cases. For reasons not entirely clear, the rule, there provided for appeal from the judgment on the plea in abatement, is not the same in case where defendant is aggrieved as where plaintiff is the complaining party.- If the
Now it would seem clear that defendant’s appeal from the judgment of the justice was seasonably taken. He was defeated on the plea in abatement — awaited final judgment on the merits, which was against him, and in due time appealed from the judgment of the justice-to the circuit court — complaining it would seem only of the judgment sustaining the attachment. Section 439, Revised Statutes, applies, so far as applicable, to proceedings before justices of the peace. R. S. 1879, sec. 481; Hubbard v. Quisenberry, 28 Mo. App. 26.
If the defendant’s appeal bond was insufficient, as seems to be intimated, and not such as should have been given, then on proper motion the court should have required a bond that was sufficient. But this was not asked by the plaintiffs, and even in that case it would be the duty of the court to permit a sufficient recognizance to be filed, and not to dismiss the appeal. R. S. 1879, sec. 3053. Judgment of the circuit court affirmed.