Burns' Administrator v. Hunton

24 Mo. 337 | Mo. | 1857

Ryland, Judge,

delivered the opinion of the court.

This was a suit by James Burns, as administrator of Henry F. Burns, deceased, against Felix Hunton, before a justice of the peace, on a promissory note. There was a judgment by default before the justice’s court against Hunton, who after-wards prayed for and obtained an appeal to the Circuit Court. Upon the filing of the transcript of the justice’s proceedings in the Circuit Court, the plaintiff moved the court to dismiss the appeal because no appeal is by law allowed from a judgment by default in a justice’s court to the Circuit Court, unless within ten days after the rendering of sueh judgment by default application shall have been made to the justice by the party aggrieved to set the same aside, and such application shall have been refused, and because in this ease no such application had been made, and consequently no appeal could be allowed. ■ The court sustained this motion, and dismissed the appeal at the costs of Hunton. He afterwards moved to set' aside this order dismissing his appeal, which motion being denied, he brings the cause here by appeal.

The Circuit Court committed no error in dismissing the appeal in this case. The proceedings before the justice show a proper service of the summons on Hunton, and the justice rendered the judgment against him by default correctly ; and from such judgment no appeal lies, unless the party aggrieved shall, within the time prescribed by the statute, apply to the justice to set *339aside the judgment by default, and the justice shall refuse so to do.

In this court the appellant contends that the Circuit Court erred in dismissing this appeal, because the justice’s transcript shows that the appeal was granted by the justice ; and as the law does not allow the appeal on such judgments unless the proper motion to set the same aside be first made and overruled, that in this case the mere act of granting the appeal presumes that such motion had been made and overruled. This reasoning is specious and unsafe. It was the appellant’s duty to have made the proper motion within time, and if he had done so, a rule on the justice to perfect his transcript would very soon have shown the fact. But he omits this important prerequisite step, and obtains illegally an appeal, and relies alone upon the mere fact that an appeal was granted to him, as the proof of his having performed the necessary steps to his right thereto. His duty made it necessary that his application to set aside the judgment by default and its denial should appear by the record, and not by specious and unsafe implication. His right to appeal must plainly appear, and unless this necessary application appears by the record, he has no right to appeal from a judgment by default. Such has been the uniform practice of our courts. (Barret et al. v. Lynch, 3 Mo. 261, decided in 1834.) Let the judgment be afErmed ; the other judges concurring.

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