200 Mo. 363 | Mo. | 1906
This is a suit for damages for personal injuries which plaintiff alleges she suffered through the negligence of defendant. The cause was begun in the circuit court of Buchanan county, and was assigned to Division No. 2 of that court. At the May term, 1903, an order was made and entered of record in that court transferring the cause to the circuit of Platte county, where it was tried and a judgment was rendered in favor of the plaintiff for $5,000, from which judgment the defendant has appealed.
The first question in the record is as to the validity of the order of the Buchanan Circuit Court directing the change of venue to Platte county. On that subject the record shows as follows:
May 22, 1903, defendant filed a motion in Division No. 2 of the Buchanan Circuit Court for a change of venue on the grounds that the judge of that division was prejudiced against the defendant and that the opposite party had an undue influence over his mind. The motion was in due form and supported by the affidavit required by statute. On the next day the plaintiff filed a paper referring to defendant’s application for a change of venue and averring in that connection that the defendant had an undue influence over the mind of the judge in Division No. 1 of that court and that for that reason she could not have a fair trial in Division No. 1. The paper was signed by the plaintiff’s attorney and verified by her own affidavit. ■
May 23rd an order of court was made and entered of record in words following, to-wit:
“Comes now the plaintiff by her attorney, and files motion to not transfer this cause to Division No. One; come now the parties plaintiff and defendant, by their respective attorneys, and the motion for change of venue, heretofore filed herein, is now taken up, considered by the court, and the same is by the court sustained. And now here the application of plaintiff ask*368 ing that this cause be not transferred to tbe Judge of Division No. One of tbis court is at tbis time considered by the court and tbe same is by tbe court granted. And now bere defendant deposits with tbe clerk of tbis court tbe sum of ten dollars to cover costs of said change of venue, and by agreement of attorneys Hon. A. D. Burnes, Judge of tbe Fifth Judicial Circuit, is called to try tbis cause.”
June 19th of the same term Judge Burnes appeared and presiding in tbe court made tbe following order in tbe cause which was entered on tbe record of tbe court: “Now bere tbis cause is by tbe court continued.” That is tbe last appearance, so- far as the record shows, of Judge Burnes in tbe case.
Afterwards, July 3rd, during tbe same term, tbe regular judge of that court, Division No. 2, without motion by either party, made an order, which was entered of record, setting aside tbe order of continuance that Judge Burnes bad made and ordered that tbe venue for tbe cause be changed to Platte county and transferred it to tbe Platte Circuit Court. Tbe record says that on July 6th, during tbe same term, tbe defendant presented its bill of exceptions to that action of tbe court, which tbe court refused to sign, stating as tbe reason therefor that it was untrue.
When tbe cause came before tbe Platte Circuit Court tbe defendant appeared and moved tbe court to remand it to tbe Buchanan Circuit, and in support of tbe motion filed an affidavit of one of its attorneys in which among other things it was stated that Judge Burnes bad accepted tbe call to try tbe case and bad assumed jurisdiction, bad in fact tried tbe Dákan case, which was a companion case to tbis, depending on tbe same state of facts, bad beard tbe arguments of counsel on certain motions common to both cases, and after trying tbe Dakan case made tbe order of bis own motion to continue tbis case to tbe next term and took bis
The order made hy the regular judge of Division No. 2 transferring the cause to the Platte Circuit Court is in these words:
“Now at this time this cause coming before the court for further consideration and disposition under the defendant’s application for a change of venue, which was made and filed herein on May 22nd, and during this term of this court, which said application for change of venue was partially considered hy this court on May 22nd, and then sustained, hut at that time no change of venue was granted hy the court because the attorneys of both plaintiff and defendant then, and there in open court agreed, which agreement was entered of record, that the Hon. A. D. Burnes, Judge of the Fifth Judicial Circuit of this State, might try said cause; and now the parties to the suit being present hy their respective attorneys, and it appearing and being made known to this court that the Hon. A. D. Burnes, Judge of the Circuit Court of the Fifth Judicial Circuit of Missouri, has at all times since said agreement between the said attorneys was made and entered of record, on May 22nd, refused and declined to preside or act or sit as judge in said cause, or to proceed with it in any manner, or to try it.
“And the Hon. A. D. Burnes, judge of the said circuit court, doth here now still refuse and decline to act, preside or sit as judge in said cause, or to proceed with it in any manner or to try it.
*370 “Now, therefore, it is ordered that the 'order made in this court, on June 19th, during this term of court, purporting to be an order continuing this case until the next term of this court, is hereby set aside, disregarded, and for naught held. And it further appearing to this court that the Judge of Division No. One of this court has, during all said time, been disqualified and still is disqualified to sit, preside or try said cause as judge thereof, and that he cannot sit, preside or act as judge therein.
“And it further also appearing to this court at this time that the parties to this suit have declined,, failed and refused to agree and have not agreed upon a special judge to sit, preside in and act as judge in said cause; and it further appearing to this court that both parties to this suit have failed and refused to request, have not requested, and do not request the election of a special judge to try the cause; and it further appearing to this court that the plaintiff herein declines and refuses to request the election of a special judge herein, but defendant does request the election of a special judge to try the case.
“It is now hereby ordered that in compliance with the defendant’s application for a change of venue heretofore sustained herein, a change of venue be, and the same is hereby awarded to the county of Platte, which adjoins this county, this cause is hereby transferred to the circuit court within and for said county of Platte. ’ ’’
From this it will be seen that, although, according to the recital, the parties were present in court hy their attorneys, yet neither party was moving the court to' take any action in the case and the court based its order solely on the motion for the change of venue which the-defendant had filed on May 22nd, and concerning which the order recites that court on May 22nd partially considered “and then sustained,” but did not then order
So far as the parties to the suit were concerned the only reason that either of them asserted for not wishing to try the case in one or the other division of the Buchanan Circuit Court was the alleged prejudice of the judges respectively, one party apprehending that he could not have a fair trial before one of the two judges, the other before the other judge, neither suggested any fear of a fair trial before a jury of their county. After both sides had by their respective motions thus expressed on the record their desires in regard to the venue, they agreed to a solution of the difficulty which satisfied both their demands and that agreement was the end of that controversy; it was the disposal of both motions, it was in effect an agreement to try the cause before Judge Burnes in Buchanan county in lieu of a change of venue as originally asked. Of course, they could not compel Judge Burnes to come to Buchanan county and try their lawsuit, and if he had declined the invitation the cause would have stood on the docket of Division No. 2 of the Buchanan circuit court for further disposal under the regular judge of that court. In such event, if either party, having at that time the right to ask a change of venue, had moved in that direction, the regular judge of that court would have had authority to pass on the motion. The plaintiff had never moved for a change of venue, she had only said in reference to defendant’s motion that if a change of venue should be awarded it ought not to be to Division No. 1 of the Buchanan Circuit Court; the defendant alone had moved for a change of venue, and if the right to ask the change had not been lost or abandoned by the agreement to call in Judge Burnes the defendant alone had the right to revive the motion, alone had the right to ask for a change of venue. But so far as we can gather from this record the defendant
After tbe above recitals tbe order transferring the cause to Platte county proceeds to say that Judge Burnes “doth here now still refuse and decline to act,” etc. That recital was perhaps intended to. mean that Judge Burnes was constructively before tbe court at that time refusing and declining to act, because on tbe oral argument before us counsel on both sides concurred in the statement that Judge Burnes was not then actually present in person and tbe statement of counsel for
Then the order proceeds to vacate and set aside the order of continuance made by Judge Burnes. Then it goes on to recite that the judge of Division No. 1 “has during all said time been disqualified and still is disqualified to sit, preside or try said cause as judge thereof.”
It has been decided by this court that when an application for a change of venue is made in due time based on the prejudice of the judge or the undue influence of the other party over his mind and supported by the proper affidavit, the judge to whom it is addressed must grant the petition without further proof of the alleged cause, but that when the application seeks to disqualify some other judge on like grounds it should not be granted without proof to satisfy the judge to whom the application is made that the alleged grounds for disqualification are true. [Guy v. Railroad, 197 Mo. 174.]
It does not appear in this record, from the recitals in the order or otherwise, that there was any trial of that question, but for aught that appears the court took the plaintiff’s affidavit as all-sufficient on that point. That the court had no right to do.
Then after reciting that the parties had not agreed on a special judge or agreed to elect one but that the defendant had so requested, the order awards the change of venue “in compliance with the defendant’s application for a change of venue heretofore sustained herein.” Thus the defendant’s motion, which had therefore been disposed of under agreement, was called up by the court sua sponte and sustained, not only without request of the defendant, but, in so far as we can discover from the record, against its will.
The agreement of counsel to call Judge Burnes was, for the time being at least, a satisfaction of the
Of course, in such case the defendant could not by mere non-action delay the progress of the cause, if he did not see fit to bring to the notice of the court the fact, if it was a fact, that the jtidge chosen had declined the invitation, the plaintiff could have done so; unless defendant should then move in the matter at once he would be considered to have abandoned his former motion.
If a circuit court makes an order for a change of venue in a cause pending before it, when, under the circumstances, there was no legal ground for the order, it is error; but unless the record proper shows on its face that the order was without lawful authority the party objecting to it can bring the error to the attention of the appellate court only by a bill of exceptions filed
In the case at bar the record proper in-the Buchanan Circuit Court shows that that court had no right to make the order transferring the cause to the Platte Circuit Court; therefore, the Platte Circuit Court by virtue of that order acquired no jurisdiction to entertain the cause, and the record in that court shows that the defendant did not willingly submit to its jurisdiction but yielded only when compelled to do so.
The act constituting Buchanan county a judicial circuit in itself, giving it two circuit judges and making of it two divisions, was approved April 13, 1889. [Laws 1889, pp. 73-4.] Unlike the statutes in that respect relating to the circuit courts in Jackson county and the city of St. Louis, the act above mentioned does not expressly require a cause to be sent from one division of the court to another when an application for a change of venue is asked on account of supposed disqualification of the judge, but although there is no such express requirement natural justice would dictate that the parties should not be driven to the expense and labor of going to another county when there is no reason for it. Section 3 of the act above mentioned authorizes the transfer of a cause from one division of the Buchanan Circuit Court to the other on agreement of the parties or their counsel or agreement of the judges of that court; therefore, there is no law to forbid such
In the case at bar if the application for a change of venue had come on for judgment either originally or after thé supposed declination of Judge Burnes; the court, with the regular judge presiding, should have
The decisions of this court construing our statutes in reference to changes of venue in criminal cases to which we are referred do not entirely settle the questions we have in this case, because the statutes in reference to changes of venue in criminal cases are different from those we are now considering.
The Buchanan Circuit Court was in error when it ordered that the cause be transferred to the Platte Circuit Court and for that error the judgment of the' Platte Circuit Court is reversed and the cause remanded to that court with directions to return the same to Division No. 2. of the Buchanan Circuit Court and directions to the latter to resume jurisdiction of the cause and proceed with it according to law.