186 Mo. App. 408 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1914
— The plaintiff recovered a judgment for $492 as damages sustained by Mm occasioned by the alleged negligence of the defendant in handling two cars of watermelons while being switched by defendant in its yards at Chaffee, Mo., on August 17, 1912. The facts are that plaintiff was shipping two carloads of watermelons over defendant’s railroad and was accompanying them in person, and while the cars were being switched they, were run against some other cars with such force as to break, bruise and greatly damage the watermelons.. Plaintiff also sustained injuries to Ms person in the collision.
It appears that plaintiff, prior to the commence-' ment of this suit, instituted a suit against tMs defendant in the circuit court of Crawford county, Arkansas, wherein he recovered a judgment for $18,000 for Ms physical injuries. The injuries to his person, for which he recovered .the judgment in Arkansas, and the damage to Ms melons — the subject of tMs action— were occasioned by the same alleged negligent and wrongful act of the defendant in kicking its cars together at the time and place mentioned. The plaintiff on cross-examination admitted he had recovered the judgment in Arkansas for ¡his personal injuries caused by tMs collision and the defendant introduced in evidence a copy of the pleadings and the judgment rendered in the Arkansas case.
If the judgment for $18,000 had been ¡rendered in Missouri, there is no doubt that it would be a bar to the present action because a single wrongful act gives rise to only one cause of action on which there can be but one recovery, regardless of the numerous items of damage that may have been suffered — the damages resulting from one and the same tort must be assessed and recovered in one action; the cause of action cannot be split up and various srnts brought for the different items of damage where such items grew out of one wrong. [Steiglider v. Railway Co., 38 Mo. App. 511;
The pleadings "and judgment in the Arkansas suit were properly introduced in evidence by the defendant, duly authenticated, under the' acts of Congress. It was said in the case of Western Assurance Co. v. Walden, 238 Mo. l. c. 61, 62, 141 S. W. 595:
“The record in this case discloses the facts that said judgment and transcript were duly authenticated according to the act of Congress governing such matters ; also shows that the circuit court of Cook county, Illinois, is a court of record, and has a judge presiding, a clerk attending upon the same, as well as a seal of court. Upon that state of facts the law presumes that such a court is a court of general jurisdiction and that it had jurisdiction of the subject-matter of the action pending therein, and of the parties thereto;
‘ ‘ Section I of article IV of the Constitution of the United States provides that ‘full faith and credit shall be given is every State to the public acts, records and judicial proceedings of every other State.’ Pull faith and credit cannot be given to judgments and judicial proceedings of another State, by the courts of this, except where those matters are called to the court’s attention, and that can only be done in such a case by offering or introducing them in evidence.”
Respondent, however, contends that splitting a cause of action is a common law, not a statutory defense, relying upon the case of Clark v. Barnes, 58 Mo. App. 667, holding that the courts of Missouri cannot presume that the common law is in force in Arkansas, and that in those cases in which our courts will not presume that the common law is in force in a sister State, they will, in the absence of pleading or proof, presume, that the statute law of that State is like the statute law of this, citing McManus v. Railroad, 118 Mo. App. 152, 94 S. W. 743. Respondent argues from this that as the rule against splitting causes of action is a defense under the common law and is not a statutory rule in Missouri, there being a failure on the part of appellant to prove that Arkansas is a common law State, it could not rely on the rule against splitting, as stated, under the common law, and that as there is no statute in Missouri against splitting causes of action, our courts cannot hold, in the absence of proof, that there is a statute in Arkansas which prevents, splitting.
The action in the circuit court of Crawford county, Arkansas, for the personal injuries and the present action for damages are both common law actions for negligence, both growing-out of the same tort,; they are therefore transitory and could be brought wherever the defendant might be found and jurisdiction over it
Counsel for appellant have met the contention and show that the common law of England was extended over the territory now embraced within the State of Arkansas when such territory was a part of the Territory of Missouri. In their reply brief is set out the various acts of Congress and territorial laws of Missouri-relating to the territory now embraced within the State of Arkansas, and we adopt that part of their brief:
To the above rules, in the main, and as general propositions, we agree; but we do not concede that respondent’s conclusion therefrom, as respects the State of Arkansas, is correct, for the reason that that State was originally a part of the territory of Missouri, and was such when it was organized as a territory on March 2,1819. [3 U. S. Stat. at Large, p. 493.] The common law was adopted in Missouri on January 19, 1816'. [Territorial Laws of Mo., p. 436.] The common law, therefore, had been adopted by Missouri Territory, and it applied to all the territory which now composes the State of Arkansas, three years before the organization of “Arkansaw Territory,” because Arkansas was then a part of Missouri Territory.
A brief summary of the various laws in the early .period of the history of the Louisiana Accession will not be out of place here, since it will serve to explain the advent of the common law in that part of the Louisiana Purchase not embraced within the limits of the then Territory of Orleans, but embraced within all that portion of the Accession north of the thirty-third degree of north latitude.
By an Act of Congress, entitled, “An Act erecting Louisiana into two territories and providing for the temporary government thereof” approved March 26, 1804, it was provided:
“That all that portion of country ceded by Prance to the United States, under the name of Louisiana, which lies south of the Mississippi territory, and of an east and west line to commence on the Mississippi River at the thirty-third degree of north latitude, and to(extend west to the western boundary of said cession, shall constitute a territory of the United States under the name of the Territory of Orleans.
“Sec. 12. The residue of the Province of Louisiana ceded to the United States shall be called the District of Louisiana.” [1 Territorial Laws of Mo., p*. 5; 2 U. S. Stats, at Large, p. 283.]
Afterwards', by an Act of Congress entitled “An act further providing for the government of the District of Louisiana” approved March 3, 1805, the name was changed from “District of Louisiana,” to “Ter
By section 1 of the Act of Congress entitled, “An act for the admission of the State of Louisiana into the Union and to extend the laws of the United States to the said State,” approved April 8, 1812, it was provided :
“Whereas, the representatives of the people of all that part of the territory or country ceded, under the name of ‘Louisiana,’ by the treaty made at Paris on the thirtieth day of April, one thousand eight hundred and three, between the United States and Prance, contained within the following limits, that is to say: Beginning at the mouth of the River Sabine; thence, by a line to be drawn along the middle of said river, including all islands, to the thirty-second degree of latitude; thence due north to the northernmost part of the thirty-third degree of north latitude; thence along the said parallel of latitude to the River Mississippi; thence down the said river to the River Iberville; and from thence, along the middle of said river, and Lakes Maurepas and Porchartrain, to the Gulf of Mexico; thence bounded by the said gulf, to the place of beginning, including all islands within three leagues of the coast; did, on the twenty-second day of January, one thousand eight hundred and twelve, form for themselves a Constitution and State Government, and give to the said State the name of the State of Louisiana, in pursuance of an Act of Congress entitled, ‘An Act to enable the people of the Territory of Orleans to form a Constitution and State Government, and for the ad
This Act of Congress made the thirty-third degree of north latitude the northern boundary of the State of Louisiana, the same as the Act of Congress organizing the District of Louisiana made that parallel of latitude the southern boundary line of that District.
Afterwards, by an Act of Congress, entitled “An Act providing for the government of the Territory of Missouri,” approved June 4, 1812., the name of the Territory was changed from Louisiana to Missouri. Section 1 of that Act provided: “That the Territory heretofore called Louisiana shall hereafter be called Missouri.” [1 Territorial Laws of Mo., p>. 9.]
The Governor and Judges of the Territory of Louisiana, by an act passed June 27, 1806, created a district out of the southwestern part of the District of New Madrid, and named it the “District of Arkansaw.” [1 Territorial Laws of Mo., p. 68.] This law was repealed by an Act of the Territorial Legislature, approved July 7,1807, and the jurisdiction of the Court of Common Pleas of New Madrid District was extended over the territory formerly composing the “District ofArkansaw.” [Í Territorial Laws of Mo., p. 179.]
By an Act of the Legislature of the Territory of Missouri, approved December 31, 1813, the Territory of Missouri was divided into counties, and Arkansaw County was created out of a portion of New Madrid and extended south to the thirty-third degree of north latitude, or the “northern boundary line of the State of Louisiana.” [1 Territorial Laws of Mo., pp. 293, 294.] '
By an‘act of the Legislature of the Missouri Territory, approved January 19, 1816-, the common law of England, etc., was adopted as before stated. [1 Territorial Laws of Mo., p. 436.]
This law is substantially the same now in both the States of Missouri and Arkansas as when adopted, and when it was so adopted it applied to the entire Territory of Missouri, which Territory then embraced all of the Louisiana Accession north of the thirty-third parallel of latitude.
By an Act of Congress entitled, “An Act establishing a separate territorial government in the southern part of the Territory of Missouri,” approved March 2, 1819, the Territory of “Arkansaw” was created. Sections 1 and 10 of this Act provided:
“Sec. 1. That from and after the fourth day of July next, all that part of the Territory of Missouri which lies south of a line beginning on the Mississippi River at thirty-six degrees north latitude, running thence west to the River St. Francois; thence up the same to thirty-six degrees thirty minutes north latitude, and thence west to the western territorial boundary line, shall, for the purposes of a territorial government, constitute a separate territory, and be called ‘Arkansaw Territory.’ ”
“Sec. 10. That all the laws which shall be in force in the Territory of Missouri on the Fourth day of July next, not inconsistent with the provisions of this Act, and which shall be applicable to the Territory of ‘Arkansaw,’ shall be, and continue, in- force in the latter Territory until modified or repealed by the legislative authority thereof.” [3 U. S. Stats, at Large, p. 493.]
The law of this State is that it is only in those States which were never subject to the common law that our courts will not indulge the presumption that the common law is not in force. [See, Flato, v. Mulhall, 72 Mo. 522; Sloan v. Torry, 78 Mo. 623; White v. Chaney, 20 Mo. App. 389; Hurley v. Railway Co., 57 Mo. App. 675; Crone v. Dawson, 19 Mo. App. l. c. 220, 221.] There is a long line of cases in this State cited by appellant holding that in territory over which the common law once prevailed, the presumption, in the absence of proof, is that it is still in force.
With reference to the case of Clark v. Barnes, 58 Mo. App. 667, we can find nothing from reading the opinion showing that the attention of the court was called to the territorial laws governing the territory now embraced within the State of Arkansas. We cannot, therefore, agree with the conclusion in that case that the courts of this State cannot presume that the common law is in force in Arkansas.
On the other hand, the wrong having been committed in Missouri, the law of this State relative to the rights and liabilities should govern, regardless of where the plaintiff cho’se to file his suit.
The judgment is reversed.