21 Mo. App. 138 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1886
delivered the opinion of the court.
In this cause there is no bill of exceptions. The testimony is not before us, neither are the motions for new trial and in arrest of judgment, although incorporated in the record, as they are not preserved by bill of exceptions. United States v. Gamble, 10 Mo. 457; Christy v. Myers, 21 Mo. 112.
The only point for our consideration is, does the record proper sustain the judgment ?
Prom this judgment the defendant appealed, and-gave a recognizance with sureties in the penal sum of seventy-five dollars. On the trial anew in the circuit-court, judgment was,rendered against the defendant and his sureties for an aggregate sum of one hundred and. forty-seven dollars, ofwhich, as the entry recites, ninety-seven dollars represents the value of the property, and-fifty dollars, damages for its detention.
This judgment was rendered in face of the facts, 'that the value of the property was claimed by the plaintiff, herself, in her statement, to be only eighty dollars ; the-damages to be only ten dollars, and the penalty of the recognizance, which limited the sureties’ liability, was-only seventy-five dollars.
The defendant claims that the justice had no jurisdiction in the premises, because no affidavit was filed, accompanying the plaintiff’s statement. The justice’s-transcript shows that the statement, which is otherwise sufficient,'was accompanied by an affidavit, and the affidavit of the justice is annexed to his transcript, stating-that such affidavit was duly made by the plaintiff’s attorney, was filed in the cause before summons issued, but-was mislaid and could not be found. This claim of the-defendant is, therefore, not borne out by the record.
The defendant also claims that the judgment of the circuit court is illegal and irregular in this, that it is in favor of the plaintiff in excess of the value stated and damages claimed, and against the surety in excess of the penalty of the recognizance.
That this claim is well founded is too plain for argu
We have, heretofore, permitted such remittiturs to be entered in this court, where it was clear that the judgment for the residue was for the right party. But where the fragmentary record of a trial abounds in errors, as it does in this case, it would be a violent presumption to hold that the cause was otherwise correctly tried, and we think that the purposes of justice demand that the cause be remanded.
The judgment is reversed and the cause remanded.