12 Mo. App. 185 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1882
delivered the opinion of the court.
It results from the matters appearing on the face of this record that, if a certain paper, described in the pleadings, is the last will and testament of Solomon Ketchum, deceased, the plaintiffs have no right of action. The circuit court, holding that the validity of the alleged will was res adjudicatci, sustained a motion for judgment upon the pleadings against the plaintiffs.
It appears that the alleged will was duly admitted to probate, and that afterwards a suit was instituted by the present plaintiffs, contesting its validity. The circuit court gave judgment in favor of the will, and this judgment was affirmed in the court of appeals. An appeal, with bond for stay of execution, was taken to the supreme court, wherein the cause is yet pending. Do the judgments of the circuit court and the court of appeals sustain the defence of res adjudicata, notwithstanding the appeal and supersedeas?
An appeal was unknown to the ancient common law. In the civil law and equity jurisprudence its operation was to take the whole case to the higher tribunal, there to be tried de novo and subjected to a new and final determination, without any reference to the conclusion of the inferior court. A natural sequence of this method was the general understanding that the appeal itself was effectual to vacate and annul the first judgment. The case then was still open, as if no judgment had been rendered. It seems to have been supposed, in the present case, that, by analogy with this ancient understanding, the Massachusetts doctrine, which holds that a judgment appealed from cannot be treated as a final determination for any purpose, depends for its sanction upon the fact that, in that state, the appellate court always renders a new and complete judgment,'without sending the cause back to the lower court with instructions how to proceed, and eventually to enforce its own judgment; but that in Missouri; where
It is evident, from a consideration of all these cases, that it would be saying too much, to hold that a judgment must be absolutely vacated by the appeal, before it will be disqualified for service under the plea of res ad judicata. It is sufficient, if the operation of the judgment be only suspended by the appeal. Even where there has been a judgment of an appellate court remanding the cause to the inferior tribunal with general directions, it is held that there is yet.no judgment of either court which may be pleaded as a settlement of the controversy. Aurora City v. West, 7 Wall. 82; Board, etc., v. Fowler, 19 Cal. 13. It is only where there are definite directions to dismiss the action, or the like, that a reversal and remander will constitute the matter adjudged res adjudícala between the parties. Commissioners v. Lucas, 93 U. S. 113.
This is not, as the respondents seem to suppose, an action to remove a cloud from the plaintiff’s title. It admits the clearness of the legal title, and asks for no cancellation of an intervening obstruction. But it prays only that the defendants be required to hold the title as trustees for the plaintiff’s benefit. Possession in the plaintiffs is not necessary for such a purpose. The judgment is reversed and the cause remanded.