126 Mo. App. 405 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1907
The first question to be disposed of is whether or not there is a bill of exceptions in the record for review. It is insisted by plaintiffs that the bill was filed after the time granted for that purpose had expired and therefore the bill presents nothing for review save the record proper. The facts with respect to this matter are as follows:
The cause was tried at the September term, 1904, of the circuit court, and plaintiff recovered a judgment for $4,500 ag’ainst the defendant. After defendant’s
“That thereafter, on the second day of June, 1905, and during the same term of court, to-wit: the March term of court, 1905, defendant’s motion for an entry nunc pro tuno for the filing of defendant’s bill of exceptions herein coming on to be heard, the same was submitted to the court upon the evidence introduced, and on the said second day of June, 1905, at the-same term of court, the court sustained the same, which order sustaining said motion is in words and figures following, to-wit:
“Now on this day come the said parties, by their respective attorneys, and defendant’s motion for an or'der nunc pro tunc herein being called the same is duly submitted to the court upon the evidence introduced. And the court being now sufficiently advised of, in and concerning the premises, doth find that on the first day of the term of this court, to-wit: on the sixth day of March, 1905, defendant moved the court for an order extending the time in which defendant was allowed to file its bill of exceptions herein, and that the court, for*408 good cause shown, granted defendant’s request and extended the time in which defendant was to file his bill of exceptions herein to and including August 1, 1905, and that the court on said sixth day of March, 1905, it being the first day of the March term of this court, ordered and directed the clerk of this court to make an entry of record on said sixth day of March, 1905, it being the first day of the March term of this court, extending, for good cause shown to the court, the time in which defendant was to file its bill of exceptions herein to and including August 1, 1905, that by some oversight no record entry was made herein by the clerk extending the time in which defendant was allowed to file its bill of exceptions herein to and including August 1, 1905, as allowed and ordered by the court to be done on said sixth day of March, 1905. It is therefore considered, adjudged and ordered by the court, that an entry of record nunc pro tuno be and the same is hereby made herein, in accordance with the direction and order of this court made on said sixth day of March, 1905, it being the first day of this March term of court; extending for good cause shown the time in which defendant be allowed to file his bill of exceptions herein and including August 1, 1905, and that the said record entry be and the same is hereby made as of the sixth day of March, 1905, it being the first day of the March term of court, so that the record of this court may be in conformity with what was done and ordered by the court herein on said sixth day of March, 1905, it being the first day of the term of this court.”
On July 20, at the same term, the court, for good and sufficient cause shown to it, by another order of record, extended the time for filing the bill until September 11, 1905, and on September 8th, within the time thus extended, the bill appears to have been properly signed, sealed and ordered filed by the judge and filed by the clerk. It is insisted upon this state of the record
2. The plaintiffs are minors, the children of James Gormley, suing by their next friend, William G. Gormley, for the death of their father. It is alleged in the petition substantially that the deceased, while exercising ordinary care on his part, was in the act of crossing defendant’s street-car tracks on Washington avenue in the city of St. Louis, and while so doing, became imperilled and’ was run upon and killed by defendant’s street-car under such circumstances that his injury and consequent death might have been averted had defendant’s servants exercised ordinary care on their part in managing and propelling the car, etc. The allegations of the petition, other than the amount sued for, bring the case within the purview of our penal statute, section 2864, Revised Statutes 1899, providing that for every such death, defendant shall forfeit and pay $5,-000. In this case, the petition prays a recovery for
For the reasons given in that case, the judgment will be reversed and the cause remanded.