4 Mo. App. 111 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1877
delivered the opinion of the court.
This case arises from the facts stated in the opinion delivered in the case of Moore v. Minkler, No. 117 of the present term. Minkler, whose surety the present respondent is, and who was himself originally a defendant in this suit, occupied the premises in that case sued for, as tenant of the plaintiff. Proceedings in unlawful detainer were then taken by the present plaintiff, judgment was rendered for restitution, for $120 damages^ and $200 monthly rent from August 18, 1873, until restitution, and Minkler applied for an appeal. On August 25th he filed with the justice a recognizance, in the form prescribed by the 18th section of the 2d article of the Forcible Entry and Detainer Act (Wag. Stat. 652, sec. 18). By it he, as principal, and this respondent, as his surety, acknowledged themselves indebted to the plaintiff in the sum of $800, upon the condition recited, that whereas Minkler had appealed, etc., that if Minkler should prosecute his appeal with effect and without delay, and neither commit nor suffer any waste, etc., and should pay all rents and profits, damages and costs,
The petition in the suit at bar contains two counts, — one on the first recognizance, the other on the second. Before the trial an agreed statement of facts was made, which set forth, in substance, the facts as they appear in the opinion delivered in the case of Moore v. Minkler, and those above stated. At the time the agreed statement was made, that case was pending in the Supreme Court. There was a stipulation in the agreed statement,.to the effect that if the court should find for plaintiff as to both causes of action, judgment should be rendered for- the aggregate of the bonds, and execution be issued for $1,396.15, the amount of plaintiff’s damages, intei’est, and costs; and in case the court should find on either of the other instruments, then judgment should go accordingly. The court sustained a demurrer to the plaintiff’s evidence; judgment was therefore given for the defendant, and the plaintiff appealed.
The defence set rip below was that set up in the case of
If, as the Supreme Court decides, the justice has no right,, under circumstances like those which existed in the present case, to take a recognizance, no jurisdiction to allow an appeal, and it follows thence that the bond is void, it is difficult to see how the recognizance which forms the subject of' the second count of the petition can be declared binding. The Circuit Court had no jurisdiction, and its order for additional security was a nullity. It is true that, under these circumstances, the act of Minkler in giving the recognizance may be considered his voluntary act. The question is-whether there is a difference between the two cases on.
It is urged that this court has held that the judgment of the Circuit Court in the case of Moore v. Minkler was binding until reversed (see opinion on motion for rehearing in that case) ; that, accordingly, it was binding when the case at law Tras tiled in the court below, and thus fully answered the condition of the recognizance. But though that judgment was such until reversed, and therefore this court would look into it to declare that it was no judgment (but not to do any thing further), yet when reversed and the law declared, that law is to be considered as having existed from the first. To hold the contrary would be directly at' war with the theory on which our system of law is based, and would be to declare that it is the province of the courts jus dare non jus dicere.
The judgment must be affirmed.