25 Mo. App. 12 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1887
delivered the opinion of the court.
This was an action in the circuit court on . a judgment of a justice of the peace, the record of which is alleged to have been destroyed by fire, the object of which seems to have been to secure an attachment against real estate of the defendant. The petition recites the recovery by the plaintiff of the judgment before the justice in the sum of fifty dollars, with costs, and, after reciting other facts, concludes by alleging that “the sum of fifty dollars is still due upon such judgment, with interest from the rendition of said judgment, for which he asks judgment.” A demurrer to the
Section 1102 of the Revised Statutes, defining the jurisdiction of the circuit courts, provides that they shall have “concurrent original jurisdiction with justices of the peace in all civil actions and proceedings for the recovery of money, whether such actions be founded upon contract or tort, or upon a bond or undertaking given in pursuance of law in all civil actions or proceedings, or for a penalty or forfeiture given by any statute of this state, when the sum demanded, exclusive of interest and costs, shall exceed fifty dollars and does not exceed one hundred and fifty dollars.” Section 401 of the Revised Statutes recites that ‘£ attachments may issue from a court of record for a sum less than fifty dollars, and not for less than five dollars, when, in addition to the affidavit hereinafter required, it shall be stated by the affiant that the 'defendant has not, to affiant’s knowledge, any goods, chattels, effects, or credits, within the state, liable to attachment issued by a justice of the peace.” An examination of the record shows that the plaintiff has not brought his case within either of these statutory provisions. Hé has not brought it within the provisions of section 1102, because his allegation is that fifty dollars is due on the justice’s judgment on which he sues, and he does not allege that any sum is due exceeding fifty dollars. He does not bring it within the provisions of section 401, because his affidavit for attachment does not state that£ 1 the defendant has not, to affiant’s knowledge, any goods, chattels,
If section 401, Revised Statutes, is construed literally, this case could not have been made to fall within the terms of either statute, because section 1102, Revised Statutes, limits the general jurisdiction of the circuit courts to cases where the amount in controversy is more than fifty dollars, exclusive of interest and costs, and section 401, which, for the purpose of giving an attachment in the circuit court against land, where the defendant has no goods and chattels within the state upon which an attachment can be levied, creates an exception to the general rule prescribed in section 1102, by its literal terms applies only to cases where the sum demanded is less than fifty dollars. Now, in this case the sum demanded is exactly fifty dollars, and if we stand upon the letter of section 401, the plaintiff could not, by making the affidavit prescribed in that section, have brought his case within its terms, so as to entitle him to an attachment leviable upon the defendant’s lands. We are of opinion, however,' that the legislature did not intend such an anomaly. We think that section 401 is to be construed as an exception to the general rule stated in section 1102, and that the exception must fit into the rule, so to speak; in other words, that the words of section 401, “for a sum less than fifty dollars,” are to be construed as meaning, for the sum of fifty dollars or less. There is abundant precedent for departing from the literal meaning of statutes in order to give effect to the obvious intent of the legislature. The State v. King, 44 Mo. 283; Connor v. Railroad, 59 Mo. 285 ; The State v Diveling, 66 Mo. 375. Thus the word, “grantor,” in a statute, has been construed to mean “grantee” (Carter v. Soulard, 1 Mo. 576); the word “such” has been rejected as a clerical inaccuracy (The State v. Beasley, 5 Mo. 91); the word “and” has been construed tornean “or” (Bank v. How, 56 Mo. 53); the words “purchasers of incumbrancers” have been held to mean “ purchasers
It thus appears that the plaintiff has not stated a case within the jurisdiction of the circuit court. But this defect may be cured by an amendment of his petition, or of his affidavit for an attachment. If the plaintiff paid the costs of the justice’s court, he will be entitled to recover them back, and this amount would swell the amount for which he is entitled to sue beyond the sum of fifty dollars, so as to bring the case within section 1102, Revised Statutes. But if the amount for which he is entitled to sue is, in fact, as stated in his petition, the'sum of fifty dollars, exclusive of interest and costs-(which means the costs of the court in which the present action is brought), then it will be competent for him to-amend so as to show jurisdiction, by making the affidavit prescribed in section 402, Revised Statutes. This-court has held that causes may be remanded for the purpose of amending, even where the amendment is necessary to show jurisdictional facts. Branahl v. Watson, 11 Mo. App. 587; s. c., 13 Mo. App. 4; Keane v. Bartholow, 4 Mo. App. 507, 510 ; Brecht v. Corby, 7 Mo. App. 300, 305 ; Vaughn v. Railroad, 17 Mo. App. 4.
We think it proper to add that, in our judgment, the demurrer to the petition, which was grounded on the-fact of the prior adjudication before the justice, was properly overruled. A judgment is a debt of record,, and may ordinarily be made the foundation of another action, the same as any other instrument by which an indebtedness is evidenced. The plaintiff could not get a transcript for the purpose of filing it in the office of the clerk of the circuit court without restoring the record under the statute, and as, according to his affidavit, the-defendant was about to leave the state, it may not have
The judgment of the circuit court will be reversed and the cause remanded.