Haynes v. County Court of Cass County

135 Mo. App. 108 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1909

BROADDUS, P. J.

This is an action brought in th.e circuit court of Cass county for a rule and attachment against the judges and the clerk of the county court of the county to show cause why they should not grant an appeal from a certain order made by them *111as such judges and clerk for the holding of an election as provided by the Local Option Law.

On November 14, 1908, a petition of the voters of the county was presented to the county court, petitioning for the holding of an election to determine whether or not spirituous and intoxicating liquors, including wine and beer, should be sold within the limits of the county. The court proceeded to hear and determine the matter and, after having examined the poll hooks of the last previous general election held in said county and having compared the names on said petition, found that it was signed by one-tenth of the qualified voters of the county who were qualified to vote for members of the Legislature at the last general election held therein, and that there was not any city or town in said county at the time of twenty-five hundred inhabitants or more, and ordered the election to be held and appointed a day for the purpose.

On the next day, the council of the city of Pleasant Hill in said county passed an ordinance for the taking of a census of the inhabitants of the city. A census was taken in pursuance of the ordinance which showed there were 2,569 inhabitants in the city at that time. On the 9th day of December and' during said November term plaintiffs appeared in the court and filed a motion to set aside the order for the holding of said election which the court overruled and refused to set aside the order. The plaintiffs filed an affidavit for appeal which the court refused to allow. The purpose of this proceeding is to compel the county court to grant them an appeal from the order for the holding of the election and the order refusing to set aside the same.

The ground upon which plaintiffs asked the court to set aside the order for holding said election is that the finding of the court, that the city of Pleasant Hill did not contain more than twenty-five hundred inhabitants, was not true as shown by the later census taken by the city. It appears that the defendants computed *112the number of inhabitants in Pleasant Hill from the last national census taken in 1900, which showed that the number was less than twenty-five hundred.

The plaintiffs claim, as taxpaying citizens, they have an interest in the controversy especially by reason of the cutting off of about $1,500 yearly revenue of the city of Harrisonville, a city of said county, if said proceedings are not annulled. The circuit court sustained a demurrer to plaintiffs’ petition and denied the rule and plaintiffs appealed. The respective parties in their arguments and briefs have gone into the merits of the controversy; that is to say, as to the legality and propriety of the proceedings of the county court for the holding of said election. But we shall confine ourselves to the sole question of which we have jurisdiction, viz., were the plaintiffs entitled to an appeal from said order of the county court.

The first question presented is, was the action of the county court a proceeding from which an appeal could be taken to the circuit court of the county. Section 1674, Revised Statutes 1899, provides in subdivision 4, that circuit courts shall have, “Appellate jurisdiction from the judgments and orders of county courts in all cases not expressly prohibited by law,” etc. Section 1788, idem, provides that from a final determination of any case in a county court, “Such appeal shall be prosecuted to the appellate court in the same manner as is now provided by law for the regulation of appeals from justices of the peace to circuit courts, and, when any case shall be removed into a court of appellate jurisdiction by appeal, such appellate court shall thereupon be possessed of such cause, and shall proceed to hear and determine the same anew, and in the same manner as if such cause had originated in such appellate court, without regarding any error, defect or informality in the proceedings of the county court.”

The plaintiffs rely upon the two sections quoted to sustain their .right to their appeal. The language used *113in section 1674 is somewhat comprehensive and, if taken to mean that an appeal will lie from any order made in any matter by a county court to the circuit court, then the order made for said election was one from which an appeal will lie. But we presume that it will not be claimed that such was its scope. The statute is to have a reasonable construction. If we construe the language not to apply to all orders or judgments of county courts in all kinds of matters, but to all cases as the italicized word implies and as understood by lawyers and judges, the more reasonable construction of the section is that appeals are allowed in all cases, i. e., in all suits where there are parties and a subject-matter in controversy between them. [1 Words and Phrases, 993.] Or, as otherwise defined, “A contested question before a court of justice; a suit or action; a cause.” [Bouvier’s Law Dictionary.]

The proceeding taken to hold an election under the Local Option Statute was in no sense a case within the meaning of the statute regulating appeals from county courts. It was an ex parte proceeding in which there was no contest, and to which the plaintiffs were not parties, and in which they had no more interest than the general public. It was not such an order as was appealable from for another reason. An appeal is only provided for, except in certain cases, from final judgments and orders. The ordering of the election was a preliminary order. Before the proceedings were complete, the court would have had to make an order giving notice of the holding of the election, and after the election was held the result was to ’be ascertained and the court was to make publication of such result. If plaintiffs could appeal from the preliminary order, we can see no good reason why they did not have the right to appeal from any of the.subsequent orders, especially the final one, as all such orders were necessary to be made *114before a termination of tbe proceedings. Tbe statute contemplates appeals from a final disposition of a case and. not from any preliminary or interlocutory order.

Overlooking tbe fact that tbe plaintiffs were not parties to the proceedings, it is a clear proposition that they could not make themselves such. We understand from tbe argument of plaintiffs that their interest involved was that, as taxpayers, they would suffer because tbe county realized from tbe city of Harrisonville in tbe county about $1,500 a year from saloon licenses, and they would thus be deprived of their proportional share of said revenue and their taxes would be increased just so much. Tbe plaintiffs’ interest in such revenue was an interest common to all tbe taxpayers of tbe county; therefore, they were not entitled to relief by appeal. [Knapp v. St. Louis, 153 Mo. 560; King’s Lake Drainage & Levee Dist. v. Jamison, 176 Mo. l. c. 564.] In Givens v. McIlroy, 79 Mo. App. 671, “Held, that a private citizen cannot maintain an action for tbe correcting of tbe public wrong unless be specially alleges and proves that tbe public wrong has done or is about to do him a private injury in addition to and over and above tbe one suffered by him in common with tbe public.” “Only those whose private interests are affected — whose property is taken — have tbe power of appeal.” [Foster v. Dunklin, 44 Mo. 217.]

It is held, however, that, “Citizens and taxpayers-of a city are proper parties to bring and maintain mandamus in tbe name of tbe State, to compel a railroad company to restore a public street which it has appropriated to its own use.” [State ex rel. v. Railroad, 206 Mo. 251.] Plaintiff relies upon this and similar cases to sustain tbe right to appeal. For an obvious reason they have -no application. In tbe one instance, they are endeavoring to assert a right common to tbe public as special individual rights in themselves while tbe law permits them to maintain an action in such case only in behalf of tbe public and in tbe name of tbe *115State. The distinction, we believe, has been clearly drawn between the two classes of actions.

Much more might be said in affirmance of the judgment of the circuit court in sustaining the demurrer to plaintiffs’ petition and denying the rule, but we believe that what has been said sufficiently explains onr views of the case, and whatever might be added would be cumulative and unnecessary. Affirmed.

All concur.
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