168 Mo. App. 11 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1912
This action, brought in the circuit court of New Madrid county, seeks the recovery of a balance claimed to be due from defendant to plaintiff on the sale of certain timber then standing on lands in that county, to be cut into logs by plaintiff and the logs to be delivered at a price designated f. o. b. cars at a .railroad switch in the county, it being charged that the amount was due when the logs were loaded by plaintiff on the cars at that place. It is averred that plaintiff cut and hauled a designated number of feet of the timber as described into logs, and loaded the logs on cars as required; that defendant received and paid for one of the carloads of logs but refused to .receive or pay for the other two cars and notified plaintiff that no more of the timber would be received by it. Claiming a balance due, plaintiff demands judgment for that, with interest and costs.
The answer was, first, a general denial; then a denial of the incorporation of the plaintiff company, the answer duly verified. The reply took issue on this and also pleaded that at the time of the agreement
The jury returned a verdict in favor of plaintiff. Defendant in due time filed its motion for a new trial. That was overruled, but so far as shown by the abstract of the bill of exceptions and, as admitted by counsel, so far as appears by the bill of exceptions which was filed, no exception was. saved to the action of the court in overruling the motion for a new trial. Plaintiff in due time filed á motion in arrest of judgment. ' That was overruled and exception saved to the overruling of that motion. Defendant thereupon duly perfected appeal to this court.
It is hardly necessary to refer to the pleadings or attempted pleadings, following the reply. Our code specifically provides that the reply is the last pleading in a cause, that, of course, subject to a motion to strike it out or to .a demurrer, as to any other pleading. An answer to a reply is unknown under our code.
Counsel attempt to cure the omission from the bill of exceptions of any exception to the action of the trial court in overruling the motion for a new trial by an affidavit made by one of those counsel, to the effect that he assisted in conducting the trial, that he prepared and filed the motion for new trial, presented it to the court, was there when the court overruled it and excepted to the action of the court in overruling the motion; that he prepared the bill of exceptions in the cause and presented the same to the attorney for respondent for approval; that that attorney refused to approve it for the reason that the record made by the clerk did not show that the appellant excepted to the
It is thus distinctly admitted in this affidavit of counsel that the bill of exceptions does not show any exception to the action of the court in overruling the motion for new trial, and that the trial court refused to sign any' bill of exceptions containing any statement that exception had been saved to -the action of the court on the motion, but did sign what the court has certified to be a correct bill of exceptions and which counsel for appellant themselves filed as the bill of exceptions in this case. This affidavit of counsel appears printed in the abstract, there following the certificate of the clerk of the circuit court to the transcript. How it came into the abstract does not appear. It nowhere appears that it was filed in the circuit court, or for that matter that it was ever filed with any court, unless incorporating it at the end of the abstract may be considered as filing it with us.
In support of' this mode of attack upon the bill of exceptions, counsel rely upon State v. Feeley, 194 Mo. 300, l. c. 315, 92 S. W. 663. In'that case it is said at thát page, “Matters of exception which occur in the presence of the court cannot he shown by affidavits, unless the court refuses to sign the -bill when presented to him upon the ground that the matters therein stated, or some of them, are not true,” citing several
The-Supreme Court, in very many cases ancb from an early day, has uniformly held that unless' that -exception appears of record, all inquiry into the proceedings at the trial is closed to the appellate courl [See Parsons v. Clark & Co., 98 Mo. App. 28, 77. S. W. 582, and cases there cited.] Bound by the- deci