238 Mo. 6 | Mo. | 1911
This plaintiff sues the defendant for injuries to herself and to her underwear, Eton suit, and hat she was wearing at the time of accident. Damages were laid at the aggregate sum of $25,000. Itemized matters of damage, in addition to general damage, are (1) hospital bill, $71.70, (2) nurse hire, $39.40 and $80, (3') ambulance hire, $10', (4) doctor’s bill, $320, (5) to glasses for eyes owing to injuries thereto, $35, and (6) for injuries to her underwear, Eton suit and hat, $65.
Defendant is charged (1) with a violation of the Vigilant Watch ordinance of the city of St. Louis, and (2) with a violation of the speed ordinance of said
Answer was (1) general denial, and (2) a plea of contributory negligence. Eeply was general denial.
Plaintiff, upon a trial before a jury, had a verdict for $8,750', upon which judgment was rendered. Defendant filed its motion for new trial and in arrest of judgment, and the motion for new trial was sustained on the ground that the trial court had no jurisdiction of the cause. From this judgment sustaining said motion the plaintiff has appealed. Matters of evidence so far as required will, be noted in the opinion.
I. The first question presented is whether or not we should consider an additional abstract of the record filed by defendant in this cause. Plaintiff objects to it because not served in time and because not properly a part of the record in this case. Upon the first objection affidavits have- been filed. For the defendant, the affidavits tend to show that the attorney for plaintiff before the expiration of the time for service of the additional abstract agreed that it would be satisfactory if served the day after the time had expired, and that it was so served. Affidavit contra by attorney for plaintiff. The several affidavits for the defendant, one of which is from an entirely disinterested person, the printer of the record offered, leads us to conclude that there was an agreement, and that the abstract was served at the time agreed upon by the parties. This objection will therefore be overruled.
The second objection goes to the substance of the additional abstract. With one exception, the additional abstract is matter of record in the case at bar in the St. Louis Circuit Court. The. additional abstract shows a trial of this same cause in April, 1909. It shows a judgment for the plaintiff in the sum of $3,000, upon a verdict of a jury-in that sum. It shows the filing and overruling of a motion for a
It will be observed that all the matters set out in the additional abstract of record are matters of record in this case in the circuit court, save the last mentioned matter. That, if a record at all, is a record in the St. -Louis Court of Appeals. Barring this last mentioned record we think the additional abstract is proper. They are all matters of which the- trial court in the second trial must take judicial notice as being a part of the case before him on the second trial.
We therefore rule that in so far as the additional . abstract contains matters of record or on file in the circuit court it is proper. To what extent they may avail the defendant on this appeal we discuss later.
To our minds' there are two propositions upon which this judgment must be affirmed. A ruling upon one would not necessarily preclude a rehearing of the cause, but a ruling upon the other would mean an absolute disposition of the cause for the present. These two questions we take in the order stated. The question raised as to the sufficiency of the proof to make a case, we do not discuss for reasons which will become apparent later.
“The court instructs the jury that if they find a verdict in favor of the plaintiff, they will assess her damages at such sum as will reasonably compensate her for whatever injuries you believe from the evidence she has sustained, if any, and in estimating such damages you will take into consideration:
“1st. The nature, character and extent of such injuries, if any, and directly-caused thereby.
“2nd. The physical condition she was in before the injuries, the physical pain and mental anguish, if any, which she has suffered from said injuries and directly caused thereby.
“3rd. The pain of body and mind, if any, which plaintiff is reasonably certain to suffer from said injuries in the future, and directly caused thereby.
“4th. The impairment of her ability to work or labor, if any, and directly caused by such injuries.
“5th. The reasonable expenses paid out and incurred by her, if any, for hospital bills'on account of such injury, if any, and directly caused thereby, in a sum not to exceed $71.70; the reasonable expenses paid out and incurred by her, if any, for nurse hire, on account of such injuries if any, and directly caused thereby, not to exceed $39.40; the reasonable’ expenses paid out and incurred by her, if any, for ambulance hire on account of such injuries, if any, and directly caused thereby, not to exceed $10; the reasonable expenses paid out and incurred by her in procuring physicians ’ and doctors’ attention, if any, on account of such injuries, if any, and directly caused by such injuries, not to exceed $225; the reasonable damage incurred by her, if any, to her underwear, Eton suit, and hat, if any, on account of said injuries, if any, and directly caused thereby, not to exceed $65.
*15 “Your finding in the aggregate whieh yon may allow plaintiff will not be over twenty-five thousand dollars.”
It is the fourth specification which renders the instruction bad. There is no limit placed to the amount of recovery upon this item of damage by the instruction. Turning to her petition we find that the plaintiff did place a limit upon this item of her damages. The petition upon this point, reads:
“That she has been, and will be unable to work and earn wages,' means and salary, as a seamstress and tailor, at the rate of three dollars per day, to support and sustain herself.”
By the petition the impairment of her earning capacity was' limited to three dollars per day. The allegation above quoted refers to future as well as past impairment of earning capacity. The petition says that “she has been (past) and will be (future) unable to work and earn wages ... at the rate of three dollars per day.” Under this allegation the amount of recovery as to impairment of earning capacity, both future and past, should have been limited to at least the three dollars per day asked in the petition. After plaintiff had seen fit to limit this item of damage, the jury should not have been given the unbridled license contained in this instruction. The exact question has. been passed upon in several very recent cases.
[Radtke v. Basket & Box Co., 229 Mo. l. c. 18; Smoot v. Kansas City, 194 Mo. 513; Heinz v. Railroad, 143 Mo. App. 38.]
In the Radtke case, supra, we reviewed the authorities upon the question, and in so doing in part said: ‘ ‘ The petition charged that his loss of earnings before the trial were nine dollars per week. Not only so, but that was the measure fixed for future loss of time for the petition reads: ‘ and will continue to lose said sum in the future for an indefinite period.’ The
In the Smoot case, supra, we used this language: “Applying the rules as thus indicated by the cases heretofore cited, should this court undertake to cure the error of instruction numbered 4 by ordering that a remittitur he entered? Upon a careful consideration of the entire record we have reached the conclusion that it should not. The record in this case presents an action for personal injuries, and it is clear that there is no positive criterion for determining what the damages ought to be, nor can this court determine what elements of damages were considered by the jury in arriving at their verdict. They were directed by instruction 4, without any limit being fixed, to assess the damages for the loss of time by the plaintiff from his means of livelihood, and it would simply be pure guesswork by this court, as was said in Slattery v. St. Louis, 120 Mo. 183, as to what amount was allowed by the jury for damages occasioned by the loss of such time.”
So in the case at bar the plaintiff saw fit to fix her earning capacity in the petition at three dollars
For the error in this instruction the judgment should be affirmed, although not assigned as a reason by the trial court.
However, there is a more serious defect in the record, which we take next.
II. That the St. Louis Circuit Court lost jurisdiction of this cause when it granted an appeal to the St. Louis Court of Appeals there can be no question. The real question is whether or not it was reinvested with jurisdiction by the mandate of the Springfield Court of Appeals. If it was not, then it was without jurisdiction to proceed further. We must judicially know that the St. Louis Circuit Court is not within the appellate district of the Springfield Court of Appeals, but that appeals from such court must go to the St. Louis Court of Appeals, because within the territorial limits of such appellate district. We have but recently held that the judgment of the. Springfield Court of Appeals in a case coming from the St. Louis Court of Appeals District was null and void. [State ex rel. v. Nixon, 232 Mo. 496.]
In this case we held that jurisdiction in the Springfield Court of Appeals could not be conferred by consent, because there was no jurisdiction of the subject:matter. This opinion was handed down February 9, 1911, at which time the present' case was
In our judgment, the trial court was without jurisdiction.
III. It is urged that the defendant waived the jurisdiction of the circuit court by going into the second trial. This position is not tenable for the reason that after the first judgment for $3,000 was entered and the circuit court granted an appeal to the St. Louis Court of Appeals, the circuit court parted with jurisdiction of the very subject-matter. The whole case was gone from its jurisdiction and its jurisdiction of the subject-matter was not reinvested. Without the court being possessed of the subject-matter no act of the parties can confer jurisdiction. The want of jurisdiction over the subject-matter was apparent from the court’s own records in the cause.
It has been held, and I think properly, that a defendant hy going into a second trial after the defendant had taken an appeal from an order granting the plaintiff a new trial on a verdict in defendant’s favor, should he held to have waived the appeal. [Trundle v. Insurance Co., 54 Mo. App. l. c. 191-192.] This Trundle case was cited with approval hy this court in State
But the Trundle case is not this case. In this case if we say the defendant waived its appeal, we still have the judgment for $3,000= staring the trial court in the face and bespeaking final adjudication of the case.
Plaintiff did not bring her suit over, but proceeded to the second trial of the same case, with the record entries therein within the judicial notice of the court. A court must know what has been done in a particular case from its inception to its close, and a plea of res adjudicata finds no place in such a situation.
To our mind there is nothing in either the question of waiver or the want of a plea of res adjudicata. If the appeal of defendant could be and was blotted out by acts which amounted to a waiver of the appeal, there was still left of record this judgment of three thousand dollars which was not waived.
Waiver is an intentional act, and outside of the foregoing it is clear that the defendant was waiving nothing in this case. We are forced to the conclusion that this case is yet pending in the St. Louis Court of Appeals and that plaintiff should have gone to that tribunal rather than to the circuit court. In our opinion the face of the record in this case bespeaks the lack of jurisdiction in the circuit court at the rendition of this last judgment and its order granting a new trial for that reason is sustained and affirmed.