131 Mo. App. 481 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1908
This action is based on section 9466 of the Revised Statutes of 1899. Said section provides for a penalty of five dollars a day to be recovered in an action of debt, by any party in whose favor judgment has been given for a private road over the land of another, from the owner of the land, for each day the road remains unopened after the date it is ordered opened. The penalties sued for amount to $255 for the period the road was kept closed subsequent to December 6, 1906, the date on which it was to be opened according to the order of the court, to the date of the filing of the petition in the present action, February 6, 1907. The like penalty per diem is prayed for each day after the last date until defendant opens the road. In a proceeding instituted by appellant in the county court of Lawrence county, for the establishment of a private
“That the damages of the owner of said land, viz: John J. Knoblaugh, on account of the establishment of said road and the erection of a three-wire fence on the east side of said road, one being now erected on the west side, will be the sum of fifty dollars, and the said John Engler having paid said sum of fifty dollars, to the treasurer of Lawrence county for the use of the owner of said land,” etc.
In truth the commissioners reported nothing about the fencing and assessed nothing in respondent’s favor for the erection of a fence; but the whole sum allowed
Before taking up the principal question in the case, we will notice the course of the proceedings in the county court for the opening of the road, which was, ' to say the least, very irregular. No objection in writing to the award of the commissioners was preferred by respondent, but he protested orally and threatened to appeal from a confirmation of the report. The statutes do not say objections must be in writing, but this would be the orderly method. If it be allowed the county court may act in such a case on an oral •objection to the report of commissioners, the question Is: what action should be taken, and the answer is plain; for section 9464 says, if a person through whose land the road passes objects on account of the damages awarded him, an issue shall be made up in the county court, a jury sworn to determine the amount of damages to which he is entitled, and judgment given in conformity to the finding of the jury. This course was not pursued, but, instead, after a wrangle with respondent, the county court, in order to appease him and prevent an appeal, gave judgment establishing the road as described in the: report of the commissioners; that respondent have and recover the fifty dollars paid by appellant to his use; that the latter should construct and forever maintain the fencing made necessary by the road, and respondent should have four months from the date of the judgment to gather his crops before opening the road. The statutes relating to the opening of private roads, nowhere authorize a judgment requiring petitioners for a road to construct and maintain fencing to inclose the land of some proprietor through whose farm the road will run. On the con
Besides omitting from the entry the part- of the judgment relating- to fencing, the clerk committed yet another misprision. In recording the judgment he inserted a recital importing the commissioners had taken into consideration the expense to respondent of erecting a fence along the road, and had included said expense as part of the fifty dollars awarded for damages; whereas the report of the commissioners said nothing about fencing- and assessed the fifty dollars as the value
The judgment given by the county court, in so far as it required appellant to build and maintain the fencing, was unauthorized and highly irregular, if not void, and the judgment shown by the record was never given. The evidence on this point is satisfactory and the question for decision is whether or not appellant can be restrained in the present action, from talcing advantage of the false entry. The-situation in which respondent is placed by the state of the record in the county court, appeals strongly to the conscience of a court of equity, for it is palpable if the appellant is permitted to succeed in his action, he will recover heavy penalties to which, in right and justice, he has not the slightest claim, and respondent will be punished and perhaps ruined in consequence of an error for which he is not to blame. He is without remedy at law and must be relieved in equity, if at all — a circumstance which, of course, largely controls a court in determining whether or not it may grant equitable relief in a particular cause. For appellant it is argued the defense of respondent is a collateral attack on the judgment of the county court,, and, therefore, untenable. The defense is not, in essence, an attack, direct or indirect, on the judgment pronounced by the county court, but is an effort to restrain appellant from taking advantage of an alleged judgment which never Avas rendered, but appears to have been in consequence of a misprision of the clerk of the court. And if in legal contemplation, the an-SAver attacks the judgment, the reply to the argument for appellant is that a proceeding lies in equity, in proper limits, to restrain the judgment of a court of law Avhich was procured by fraud, or given through
One essential condition of relief in such a case, as
As much cannot be said for appellant; for though no actual fraud was proved, it was shown his attorney, who was not present when judgment was rendered, prepared a form for the record without acquainting himself with what judgment had been given. This laxity of the attorney, combined with the carelessness of the clerk, was the cause of the erroneous entry. Much stress is laid on the failure to prove positive fraud; and it is true the answer charges fraud; but though the testimony, all of which went in without objection, falls short of proving fraud, it establishes a clear case of accident or mistake, imputable to no want of care on the part of respondent, but rather to the negligence of the clerk and appellant’s attorney. The court below found appellant procured the erroneous entry without finding he fraudulently procured it. No contention was made in the motion for new trial that the relief granted was outside the scope of the answer, nor was ■any question raised during the trial of a variance between the proof and the answer. In view of those facts the judgment ought not to be reversed and a new • trial directed because the erroneous entry appears to have occurred through inadvertence instead of fraud.
The case seems to fall under the ancient head of “Accident,” as that word is used in equity jurisprudence, rather than under the head of “Mistake,” a term more applicable, in its technical sense, , to suits wherein a complainant solicits relief against a mischievous act of
But it is insisted the record of the judgment of -the-county court imports absolute verity and can only be-impeached by some matter of record contained in the judgment roll. This is true when an amendment at. law is sought. [Belkin v. Rhodes, 76 Mr. 643.] Equity always has accepted parol evidence in certain cases of' fraud, accident or mistake, but requires it to be cogent, and convincing before it will suffice for a decree to restrain a judgment. [Davison v. Hough, 165 Mo. 561, 574, 65 S. W. 731; Smith v. Butler, 11 Ore. 46; Gump’s Appeal, 66 Pa. l. c. 478; Insurance Co. v. Chichocky, 94 Ill. App. 168, 170.] In the case at bar the record of' the county court cannot be corrected to recite the judgment actually pronounced, because we consider that judgment contrary to the statutes. But as the one recorded was not rendered, its enforcement ought to be-enjoined. The judgment of the circuit court went no' further than to enjoin it and will be affirmed.