108 Mo. App. 388 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1904

REYBURN, J.

— This action was brought before a justice of the peace in the city of St. Louis, against defendant, a foreign railroad corporation, but having an office and transacting business in that city; the writ was returned duly served and on return day, defendant made default, the justice heard testimony and rendered judgment against defendant of date March eighth, 1904; March eleventh an execution issued to the *390constable, March seventeenth, the defendant, appearing specially for such purpose, filed a motion to quash the execution which was overruled April eleventh by the justice and on April fifteenth, defendant filed affidavit and bond for appeal to the circuit court. The motion to quash reciting that defendant appeared specially for the purpose of moving to quash the execution issued in the cause and for no other purpose, recited that it was a corporation organized and existing under the laws of the State of Pennsylvania and proceeding, the defendant prayed the justice to quash the writ assigning as causes therefor that as such justice he did not have jurisdiction over defendant at time of rendering judgment, and could not lawfully render any judgment whatever against it, and the judgment purporting to have been rendered against it on the eighth of March was null, void and of no effect, because a justice of the peace of the city of St. Louis had no jurisdiction over a foreign railroad corporation, and at time of entering such judgment there had not been any sufficient service upon defendant to give such justice jurisdiction over it; that the return of the constable on the summons issued showed there had been no legal service of any writ or summons on defendant. When the transcript of record from the justice were filed in the circuit court, the plaintiff filed a motion to dismiss the appeal, assigning that the appeal was taken out of time and the justice had no jurisdiction or authority to grant an appeal from his ruling on a motion to quash an execution. Prom judgment sustaining such motion of plaintiff, defendant has appealed, attributing as error to the court below the dismissal of the appeal and the ruling that the justice was without power to quash an execution issued by him. So far as disclosed by the record legal service of the summons was had, as the transcript from the justice’s court does not exhibit the return of the constable but merely states that the summons ,was returned duly executed and the *391usual presumption in favor of the jurisdiction of the justice over defendant and. the regularity of the proceedings must be indulged. The application for appeal from the judgment of the justice specified that the appellant, as the affiant believed, was aggrieved by the action of the justice in overruling its motion to quash the execution, and that the appeal was from the merits as to such motion. No provision is made by the statute for an appeal from the ruling of a justice upon such motion, the right of appeal from justices’ courts being restricted in express terms to judgments and orders of the justice sustaining or overruling a motion to retax costs. No such motion as presented in this case appears to have been contemplated by the legislation in the provisions creating such courts, and as statutory creations such tribunals hqve such powers only as the legislature has conferred' upon them, and no cognizance over motions to quash executions upon judgments rendered by them is recognized or granted by statute, nor any right of appeal from the ruling of a justice on such motion. For these reasons as well as- for the causes more elaborately presented by this court, in the Kansas City division, a justice cannot take cognizance of a motion to quash an execution in this State, although textwriters and the décisions of courts in outside jurisdictions incline toward a different conclusion and adopt a different rule as prevailing in those states. Brownfield v. Thompson, 96 Mo. App. 340, 70 S. W. 378; Atkins v. Siddond, 66 Ala. 453; Wordehoff v. Evers, 18 Florida 339; Luco v. Brown, 73 Cal. 3; Gates v. Lane, 49 Cal. 266; Comstock v. Clemens, 19 Cal. 77; 1 Freeman, Executions, sec. 73, p. 284.

The judgment is affirmed.

All concur.
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