36 Mo. 324 | Mo. | 1865
delivered the opinion of the court.
Plaintiff, who is a minor, brought his suit in the Louisiana Court of Common Pleas against the defendant, and obtained a verdict in his favor. In the caption of his petition he purported to sue by his next friend; the defendant filed his answer to the merits, and went to trial. After the rendition of the verdict by the jury, the defendant moved the court to arrest the judgment, because no next friend had been appointed for the plaintiff by the clerk or court, as required by statute. The plaintiff then presented his petition to the court, praying the appointment of a next friend (the same person who purported to act as such in the caption of the petition) accompanied with the written acceptance and bond of the proposed next friend.
The court overruled the application and declined to make the appointment, and then arrested the judgment.
The first error assigned in this cause is the action of the court in sustaining the motion in arrest of judgment, and the second is refusing the application of plaintiff to have a next friend appointed. The defect in the petition was ap
Our law is very liberal in upholding proceedings in favor of infants where they derive a benefit therefrom. By the statute of Jeofails (E. C. 1855, p. 1255, ^ 19) it is enacted that “ where a verdict shall have been rendered in any cause, the judgment thereon shall not be stayed,” &c., by reason of “ any party under twenty-one years of age having appeared by attorney, if the verdict or judgment be for him.” The court should have appointed the next friend for the plaintiff when the application was made, and approved the bond, in order that her responsibility to the plaintiff for the money recovered in the suit might have been secured.
The judgment is reversed and the cause remanded.