27 Mo. 396 | Mo. | 1858
delivered the opinion of the court.
The plaintiff filed (July 14, 1854) an account against the defendant for the balance due on his subscription to the capital stock of the Plank Road Company. At the trial before the justice both parties appeared, and on the defendant’s motion the cause was dismissed because the plaintiff had not filed the original articles of association on which the liability of the defendant arose. The plaintiff thereupon appealed to the circuit court. In that court the defendant moved to
The record presents only two questions, which are, first, was it necessary for the plaintiff to move to set the judgment of nonsuit aside before the appeal was taken; and, second, was it necessary that the original articles of association should be filed with the justice at the commencement of the suit.
In suits in justices’ courts, if the plaintiff fail to appear in person or by agent, the justice is required to render judgment of nonsuit against him with costs, unless the action is founded on an instrument of writing purporting to have been executed by the other party and the demand is liquidated.. So also judgments by default may be rendered against the defendant if he fail to appear, and such judgments of nonsuit, and by default may be set aside by the parties for good cause;
The section of the statute which provides that “ whenever any suit shall be founded on any instrument of writing purporting to have been executed by the defendant, such instrument shall be filed with the justice before any process shall be issued in the suit,” does not apply to a case like this. The instrument on which the liability of the defendant arose was the organic act of the company, and by the by-laws of the corporation of which he was a member was required to be kept by the secretary subject to the inspection of the stockholders. It contains the names of all the stockholders ; and if it be, as the defendant contends, that this paper must be filed in a suit against any delinquent and remain with the court or justice during the pendency of the litigation, then but one suit can be prosecuted at the same time, and that one might be so long in court that an action against other delinquent subscribers would be barred by limitation. Very often all the original subscriptions to the stock of a corporation are made in one large book, containing other matter of daily use to the company, and to require such a book to be