216 Mo. 696 | Mo. | 1909
This case is twin to Ewing v. Vernon County, this volume, page 681, and was argued and submitted with that case. Mr. Harkreader was sheriff of Vernon county. He sues in three counts — • on the first, for his outlays ($246.15) for gas and water service in the county jail; on the second, for outlay ($18) for stamps used in his official business; and on the third, for outlay ($72) for janitor service in his office at $2 per month — -all which several sums he paid out because of the refusal of the county court to supply such water, gas, janitor service and stamps, and for which he demanded and was refused reimbursement.
The case went on change of venue to Henry county and was there tried before a jury — Judge Craves pre
Any facts material to vital questions raised will appear in connection with their determination.
I. Respondent insists that the bill of exceptions is out of the case because the record proper does not show a motion for a new trial was filed and does not show time was given to file a bill of exceptions after the trial term — the bill being filed subsequently. But, as in the Ewing case, the appeal inadvertently went to the Kansas City Court of Appeals. While lodged there an abstract was filed by appellant and briefs were filed on both sides. Such abstract invitejd the point raised. However, when the case came here, in due time an additional abstract was filed. We shall consider both and, taken together, they show a motion for a new trial was filed and overruled and that leave was given to file a bill of exceptions and that said bill was filed within the leave granted. Hence, as was done in the Ewing case, so let it be done here. The point is disallowed to respondent.
II. The same points made in the Ewing case relating to filing and overruling motions to make more specific and to strike out, are made here. The pertinent record conditions on those motions are the same in this as in that case, mutatis, mutandis. Therefore, for the reasons assigned there, the points are disallowed to appellant here.
III. Moreover, the interpretation given to the statutes construed in the Ewing case, the reasoning employed to support' the decision and the result reached are in point in the case at bar. Those reasons and interpretations .will not be restated and that case should be read and taken with this. Having reached that conclusion, the judgment should be affirmed out of hand, without more, were it not for certain assign
The sheriff’s office was not only entitled to janitor service as a public office, under the doctrine of the Ewing case, but it was used as a jury room and for the convenience of witnesses summoned in cases in which rules were made separating witnesses. We do not deem such use as accentuating the county’s liability but the evidence is of some sentimental value in pointing to the decent treatment due those called upon to perform the duties of good citizenship. It is argued that the sheriff’s bill for stamps and janitor service should have been audited and allowed by the circuit court. But we are pointed to no provisions of the statute requiring a preliminary auditing, or viseing, of claims by the circuit court when such claims do not arise out of some order made by that court or in some matter that court has statutory supervision of. A lawsuit, where issues are framed on pleadings and submitted to a jury under instructions of the circuit court and a result reached under the solemnities of the law, is an audit of the very highest order. In the absence of an express statute requiring a preliminary or another audit, we shall not hold that one was necessary. The instructions asked by defendant on the second and third counts were peremptory ones to find against plaintiff. The instructions given for plaintiff on those counts are not objected to as incorrect propositions of law, provided plaintiff was entitled to recover at all. Therefore, the instructions need no consideration, and what is said in the Ewing case
Accordingly, the judgment will he affirmed as to them.
IY. The case made on the first count is this: Plaintiff as sheriff and ex officio jailer resided in the jail. It was a stone building, built in days when there were no public sewers in the city of Nevada and no public service corporations furnished gas or water. There fell a time when it was modernized and enlarged, and when plumbing was put in connecting the sinks, bathtubs, washbowls, flushing tanks, commodes, urinals, etc., with the public service water mains and with the public sewer and the lighting plant — the same corporation furnishing both water and gas. At a certain time during plaintiff’s* term as sheriff a squabble arose between this public service corporation and the county court. The merits of it are not here. On a certain night without notice to the sheriff and without providing any other water service or water pressure or light of any character, the light and water were shut off from the jail by an order of the county court. When the sheriff came to the jail he found it dark, and, inferring that the court was momentarily disgruntled, he diplomatically thought it best not to interview the court in the sharp edge of its present mood, but to await for the edge of its displeasure to be dulled by second thought in a day or so. But, being in extremity for water and light and having no other means at hand to supply the same, he caused the gas and water connections to he re-established until he could bring the matter before the court at a more auspicious season. This he presently did. The trial court ruled that what the court did on that occasion must appear from its records and not by parol. Accordingly, defendant’s counsel introduced a certified copy of the proceedings of the county court. But the record is
It appears that plaintiff during his official term from day to day had charge of from one to thirty prisoners — an average of ten or eleven. The cells were the usual iron cage cells, one tier above another, the upper cells being a woman’s department and having separate sanitary, sewer and water connections. The jail had a concrete floor and the conventional caged corridor. The water closets were partly hopper closets, that is, closets that flushed themselves automatically when used, and partly tank closets, flushed by pulling a chain. There was a well in the jail yard. Whether its water was well water, or rain water from the roof of the jail, or a blend of both, we do not clearly make out. Plaintiff put in proof that its water was unfit for use when he took charge of the jail; that reas
There was competent testimony this was a reasonable rate. There was other testimony tending to show it was an unreasonable one and that it would have been more economical to have put a water meter into the
On such a record it is argued, unsoundly, we think, that the court committed reversible error in not allowing the presiding judge of the county court to testify to .the mere offer made to the sheriff through him as a mouth-piece, in the presence of his associates.
It is further argued, unsoundly, we think, that the plaintiff made no case as a matter of law. We think so because:
(a) The case of Riley v. Pettis County, 96 Mo. 318, is cited as authority for the proposition that the court erred in excluding the offer of testimony, but that ease is not in point. It does not hold that the official action, whatever it be, of the county court ought not to be shown by its record. It holds that the mere record of the county court would not bind the other contracting party, if any, and that his assent or refusal to assent might be shown by parol. We are cited to Boggs v. Caldwell Co., 28 Mo. 586; but that case was limited and distinguished in Dennison v. St. Louis Co., 33 Mo. 168, was doubted in Reppy v. Jefferson County, 47 Mo. 66, and its authority still further shaken in Maupin v. Franklin County, 67 Mo. 327. It has not been followed heretofore and we shall not follow it now. At most, under the Riley case and other cases on that line, the offered evidence would be admissible only to show the position taken by the sheriff. We construe that position, in effect, to be that he wanted the court to make some arrangement to reconnect the jail with the city water and light, holding that the existing status, the plumbing in the jail, and the sanitary arrangements there, as well as safety and security, demanded such connection; that his idea was that it had to be made “if he had to pay for it himself.” Observe, this was all by way of argument on his part. He did not obligate or offer to obligate himself to pay
The ruling was right, and, as no other question relating to the exclusion of testimony is pressed, the point is ruled against appellant.
(b) Nor did the court commit error in sending the case to the jury on the first count. It is hard to use the venerable and tranquil language of the courts in dealing with the facts of the case. The statement of facts shows that the jail had no sanitary relief except by use of the pressure from the city water mains. It is not worth while to argue that jails could be kept in sanitary condition without pressure from water service, if suitable appliances, conveniences and help were supplied for that purpose. Some jails were once kept clean and decent by such simple and homely' expedients, and by vigilance and persistent manual effort, but this jail was not arranged that way. To the contrary, it was arranged so that its sanitary condition and the health of its inmates depended on connection with the water force in the water mains, and the safety of the jail and the safe-keeping of the prisoners demanded a connection with the city gas.
In the credited annals of an oriental people, whose history will carry a live dramatic interest as long as men read and ponder upon the phenomena of life and whose ordinances and customs bear high witness to the ethical and physical value of exquisite cleanliness, it is written that every man should sweep before his own door and that, in emergencies springing from the laws of nature, a paddle should be used to make an earth closet. But the statutes of this State recognize a vast advance beyond such primeval simplicity. The face of our legislative policy is turned another way,
Time was when men did not blusb to argue that filtb in jails (at least in debtors’ jails) advanced the underlying purpose of imprisonment. That the more accentuated the uncleanliness of prisons, the more pronounced would be the curative effect on the recalcitrant prisoners; as if one shall be made to wear a tight boot in order to greatly long to put it off, or to drink brine in order that a thirst for water should be sprung. In 1793, Lord Loughborough then holding the Great Seal as Keeper of the Conscience of George the Third, published a treatise, “On the State of English Prisons and the Means of Improving Them,” from which Townsend in his Lives of Twelve Eminent Judges, quotes this passage: “ The close air and squalid condition of a prison, ‘squalor carceris/ were by many considered as the necessary attributes, and even men of respectable judgment have supposed, in the case of debtors, that the filth of the prison was a proper means of compelling them to do justice to their cred-. itors. ’ ’ (Witness the foul Bedford jail where the immortal Bunyan lay and dreamed his immortal dream.)
All such notions are worthless in an age allowing humanity as an essential element in punishment and abhorring cruelty per se in laying the law’s heavy hand on delinquents.
It is written in the statutes that jails should be “kept and maintained in a good and sufficient condition,” etc. (R. S. 1899, sec. 8104), that is, “good and sufficient” in a modern sanitary sense, having an eye to the sure results established by scientific investigation of the disease-breeding effects of filth and bad air. That statute is broad enough to cover the extraordinary condition disclosed by this record.
Let the judgment he affirmed. It is so ordered.