197 Mo. 174 | Mo. | 1906
Plaintiff, a brakeman on one of defendant’s freight trains, received personal injuries in consequence, as he declares, of the negligent handling of the train.
He brought suit for damages in the circuit court of Jackson county and the cause was regularly assigned to Division No. 5 of that court. After the pleadings were made up he applied to the court for a change of venue, alleging in his affidavit as the ground for the change that the judge of Division No. 5 was prejudiced against him and that the defendant had an undue influence over the judge and that the same reason for a change of venue applied also to each of the judges of the other four divisions, naming them. When the application came on for hearing plaintiff offered no evidence, defendant appeared and objected to the change of venue on the ground, among others, that the party could not thus disqualify all the judges in that circuit and thus send the cause to an adjacent circuit. The court ‘overruled the objection, and made an order, first, that the cause be sent to Yernon county, but on the suggestion that that county was not in an adjoining circuit the order was changed so as to send it to Bates county. Defendant duly excepted to the ruling of the court, and filed its term bill of exceptions in the Jackson Circuit Court. The cause was sent to the Bates Circuit Court, where it was tried, verdict and judgment for plaintiff for $5,150- from which defendant appeals.
We have first to deal with the question of the change of venue. This same question was decided in Eudaley v. Railroad, 186 Mo. 399. In that case, as in this, the plaintiff after bringing suit in Jackson county applied for a change of venue on the ground alleged that the judge of the division to which the cause had been-assigned was prejudiced against him and that the defendant had an undue influence over him, and that the same reason applied to all the other judges of that
We do not consider it necessary to enter anew on the full discussion of that subject as our views are set out in the opinion in that case. In the brief of respondent, however, it is suggested that we did not in that case refer to the act of 1879 which made two divisions of the circuit court of Jackson county (Laws 1879', p. 82), and which in section 11 thereof provided that: “After the date aforesaid, no change of venue shall be allowed by said circuit court for any reason that may be alleged against the judge of the division to which the same is assigned, but if any such reason exist, the cause shall be transferred to the division held by the other judge; but if reason exist against both the judges of said court, then such change may be allowed to the circuit court of some contiguous county, unless otherwise disposed of according to law.” Since the passage of that act there have been two other acts of the General Assembly relating to the organization of the circuit court of Jackson county, one making four divisions (Laws 1889, p. 77), the other increasing it to five divisions (Laws 1901, p. 118.) The act of 1889' declares
The general statutes, sections 818 to 822, Revised Statutes 1899', inclusive, show that the law-makers had in mind only courts in each of which there was but one judge and they made provision for the- change of venue in two classes of conditions only, one where the objection is to the judge, the other where the objection is to all the people of the county; in the first, the affidavit of the party is all that is required; in the second, evidence is to be heard and the charge alleged against the inhabitants of the county is to be proven. There is nothing said about another judge in another division of the same court. Those sections of the general law contain all that the General Assembly has said on the subject of the procedure to obtain a change of venue. The main purpose of section 11 of the act of 1879 was to except the circuit court of Jackson county in this particular out of the provisions of the general law which was enacted for courts of which there was but one judge, and to require the judge of the division in which the cause was pending when the charge disqualifying him was made to send it to the other division instead of to some county in another circuit.
But section 11 of the act of 1879 says, “But if the reason exists against both judges of said court then the change may be allowed to the circuit court of some contiguous county unless otherwise disposed of according to law.” “If the reason exists against both judges”— how is that fact to be ascertained? The Legislature has not said. This court has construed the clause of the general statute, sections 818 to 822, Revised Statutes 1899, in reference to the charge of disqualificationof
In the case at bar, the judge to whom the application for the change of venue was made seems to have construed the statute to mean that the affidavit of the plaintiff in support of his motion for a change of venue was conclusive, not only in so far as it referred to the judge himself, but also to the extent that it disqualified all the other judges in that circuit, and with that view of the law, without any proof at all of the charge, he