13 Mo. App. 120 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1882
delivered the opinion of the court.
A judgment was rendered against the present plaintiff in favor of defendant Finck, before defendant Yon Gerichten, a justice of the peace. An execution was issued and placed in the hands of defendant Hruska, as constable, who thereupon summoned C. G. Stifel as a garnishee. The present proceeding is to restrain the defendants, by injunction, from further attempting to enforce the judgment. The circuit court made the injunction perpetual.
There is an agreed statement of the facts, as follows:
“ That, on the 13th day of September, 1880, August Bornschein, the plaintiff, resided, in the tenth justice’s district of the city of St. Louis, and John C. Finck, the defendant, resided in the third justice’s district; that Jacob Von Gerichten was a justice of the peace for the fourth district, which adjoins the third, but not the tenth district; that, on said 13th day of September, Finck commenced a suit against Bornschein in the fourth district, and summons was thereupon issued, and served upon Bornschein in the tenth district, where he resided. It is also agreed that,*122 under a judgment by default, without appearance of Born-schein, in said suit so commenced, an execution was issued, and the constable to whom the same was delivered was proceeding to execute the same by garnishing a debtor of said Bornschein. * * *”
It is not pretended that, under the local restrictions limited in Revised Statutes, section 2839, the justice had a shadow of jurisdiction over the cause. The forbearance of learned counsel in this particular, however, seems to disappear with their presentation of other points which we are asked seri,ously to consider, in justification of a manifestly frivolous appeal.
Some of the points urged for the defendants seem to underlie a general proposition that the plaintiff has suffered no injury. It is not of the least consequence. This action is not for damages sustained, but for the prevention of' threatened injury in the future. Objection is made that the plaintiff has not shown that he had a meritorious de-fence against the unauthorized suit and judgment. It is the right of every citizen, that he shall not be proceeded against, even for a just debt, in a manner which has no sanction in the law. We are told that the injunction was not proper, because the plaintiff had a remedy at law. The only specification of such a remedy appears in the suggestion that it would be the duty of the garnishee to plead the want of jurisdiction in the justice. In other words, although A. may have no legal remedy for a threatened injury, yet, because B. may be protected against a different, or collateral proceeding, therefore A. shall not have injunction! As to an action for damages, we have yet to learn that a citizen is bound to waive preventive intervention against official usurpation, and submit to the exercise of a void or forbidden authority, because, after the infliction of the wrong, he may sue the perpetrator. Counsel for the defendants say that the statutory provisions which define the local jurisdiction of justices of the peace
The issue and service of the summons were absolutely void, and the plaintiff was not bound to respond before the justice, for any purpose. He ' could not appeal from the void judgment, because the effect would have been a waiver of its invalidity, and a submission to the appellate jurisdiction of the circuit court. Gibbs v. Missouri Pacific R. Co., 12 Mo. App. 459. The constable could not be depended upon for protection, because he had no authority to look beyond the execution. Howard v. Clark, 43 Mo. 344. Injunction was the obvious and only remedy at the plaintiff’s command. Grass v. Hess, 37 Ind. 193; Ridgeway v. Bank of Tennessee, 11 Humph. 523; Bell v. Williams, 1 Head, 229; McFadden v. Spencer, 18 Texas, 440. The judgment is affirmed.