144 Mo. 253 | Mo. | 1898
The. circuit court overruled appellant’s application for a nunc pro tunc entry of the judgment in this case. The record shows that said judgment was rendered on the nineteenth of December, 1893, but appellant claims that it was in fact rendered on the twenty-first of said month. This ruling presents the first question for decision.
Plaintiff below, the appellant here, claimed to have acquired a right of way for its railroad across defendants’ farms, and alleged that they, with weapons and violent means, were forcibly resisting the construction of said railroad over said lands, and asked an injunction to prevent interference with the work. A temporary restraining order was issued on the eleventh of October, 1892. Defendants appeared to the suit and filed answers. The case was heard on the seventeenth of November, 1893, and- taken under advisement. There was no record entry of this, however. The records of the court show that judgment was rendered for defendants and plaintiff’s bill dismissed on the nineteenth of December, 1893. Plaintiff, at the May term, 1897, filed a motion for a nunc pro tumc entry as above stated. The date of the judgment becomes material, because if it was rendered on the nineteenth the motion for a new trial whs clearly filed out of time.
It was shown upon the hearing of the application for the mmc pro time entry, that the clerk did not write
It is not disputed, nor can it be, that the settled law of this State is that entries nunc pro kmc can only be made upon evidence furnished by the "papers and files in the cause or something of record, or in the minute book or judge’s docket” "as a basis to amend by.” Gamble v. Daugherty, 71 Mo. 599. "The judgment appearing upon the record is presumptively
The only memorandum of any kind upon any record or paper in the case, relied upon as indicating anything to the contrary, is the notation of the clerk upon the written opinion of the trial judge, showing that it was filed with said clerk December 21, 1893. The judge was not required to prepare or file any such paper. It was not prepared at request of the parties under Revised Statutes 1889, section 2135. The law makes no provision for an opinion in writing by the judge of the trial court. Hewitt v. Steele, 118 Mo. 463. It was entirely optional with him whether he would write out his conclusions, and, after he had reduced them to writing, whether he would file the paper, and token. If he elected to write an opinion, it was not necessary that it should be delivered to the clerk at the time of the rendition of the judgment, but could be handed to him at the pleasure of the judge. In other words it was not a paper in the case provided for by law, but a mere statement of the reasons for his decision, written by the judge, for the convenience and satisfaction of the parties, and its delivery to the clerk was not necessarily contemporaneous with the judgment. The testimony introduced by the respondents shows that it was not in fact filed at the time the decision of the court was announced. We do not think the circuit court committed error in deciding that the memorandum upon this paper was insufficient to overthrow the judgment entry.
2. The motion for a new trial was not filed until December 27. The motion therefore was out of time