Rousey v. Wood

57 Mo. App. 650 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1894

Smith, P. J.

— This is an action based on sections 8675 and 8676, Revised Statutes, to recover damages.

The answer was that at the general election legally held on the Tuesday after the first Monday in November, 1880, in the county of DeKalb, the question of township organization was submitted to the qualified voters of said county under and pursuant to the provisions of chapter 162, Revised Statutes, 1879, at which election the majority of the legal voters of said county voting at said election for and against township organization, were for such organization, and the returns of said election were in accordance with the statute in such cases made and provided, duly certified, returned and cast up and the result of said election entered upon the records of the county court of said county, and all due proceedings were had, and that said township of Dallas, in said county, was thereafter duly organized and became subject to the provisions of said chapter 162, Revised Statutes. The answer further pleaded that the defendant, Levi Wood, was duly appointed road overseer by the said township board and that while so being, the said board by its order of *656record declared to be a public highway a certain strip of land therein described, and directed defendant to open same. It sets forth further, the steps taken by defendant under said order, and alleges that defendant as such overseer, entered upon the land described in plaintiff’s petition under said order, and performed the acts of which plaintiff complains, etc.

The replication denied that there had been an election, legal or otherwise, held at the time stated in the answer, submitting to the qualified voters of the said county the question of township organization therein, and specially denied every affirmative allegation of the answer. There was a trial and judgment for plaintiff, and defendants appealed. '

The principal ground of error relied upon by the defendants for a reversal of the judgment, is the action of the trial court in rejecting their offer in evidence of the order of the township board declaring the land described in their answer to be a public highway, and also the order directing the defendant, Levi Wood, as road overseer, to open the said highway. It is plaintiff’s contention in support of the action of the trial court, that the township board had no jurisdiction of the subject-matter of the order, and, therefore, the same afforded the defendants no protection. The proceedings of the township board which defendants pleaded in justification of the alleged trespass, involved the exercise of the right of eminent domain — the taking of private property for public use. B. S., secs. 8549, 8550.

It is suggested by the plaintiff that the defendants did not offer in evidence any record of the county court showing an order for the submission to the voters of the county, the question of township organization as required by section 7430, Bevised Statutes, 1879, nor that the abstract of the returns of said election was *657spread at length upon the records of the county court of the county as required by section 7431. Nor did they offer to further show that the clerk of said county court had certified to the secretary of state a copy of said county court record containing the abstract of the returns of said election as required by the section of the statute last cited.

The common law gave the county court no authority to submit the question of township organization to the voters of the county. By reference to the statute, already referred to, it is seen that this jurisdiction is conferred by its provisions only when one hundred legal voters petition therefor. The petition is a condition precedent to the vesting of the jurisdiction in that tribunal to order the submission. Nothing of the kind was shown in the case.

It has been ruled elsewhere that the assumption of authority is an assertion of jurisdiction without any formal statement of the facts essential to give jurisdiction. Osborn v. Luther, 108 Ind. 443. And it may be that the ordering of the election was an implied adjudication that there was filed a proper petition praying for the election to be held. Young v. Wells, 97 Ind. 410; English v. Woodman, 40 Kan. 752.

But the difficulty here is that there is no order at all. But if we go to the extent of inferring from the abstract of the returns on file in the office of the clerk of the county court that the county court did lawfully submit the question of the township organization law to the voters of the county, yet have we any evidence of the adoption of the same? What is the evidence of its adoption? Does the bare abstract alone of the vote cast at a general election on that, question, prove it? The statute, as we have already stated, requires the abstract of the vote cast to be fully spread on the county court records, which, we take it, is made evidence *658of the adoption of the law. This view is sustained by the construction of the local option cases where a similar statute was passed upon. State v. Searcy, 39 Mo. App. 393; State v. Searcy, 46 Mo. App. 421; In re Rothwell, 44 Mo. App. 219; State v. Mackin, 51 Mo. App. 307; White v. Brown, 48 Mo. App. 113; State ex rel. v. Matherby, 45 Mo. 16.

In these cases it was held that a certified copy of the abstract spread upon the records of the county court was prima facie evidence at least, that the law had been adopted. And no reason is perceived why a like rule may not appropriately apply in a case of this kind. But to hold that the original abstract of the vote .as certified to by the clerk, without the exhibition- of either the order of the county court submitting the question of the adoption of the law, ora certified copy of the county court record which contains the abstract of the returns, is prima facie evidence of the adoption of the law, it seems to us is going farther than we are authorized to go by the ruling made in any case to which our attention has been called. And especially so in view of the familiar principle that nothing is taken by intendment in favor of the action of a court or tribunal of special or limited jurisdiction, but it must appear by the recitals of the record itself that such facts existed which authorized the court or tribunal to act and that it has kept within the limits of its lawful authority.

And not only this, but the proceedings of the township board that-are drawn in question in this case are in invitwm, in derogation of the common law as has already been stated and for that reason must be regarded as strictissimi juris, and can receive no help from intendments or implications. Railroad v. Young, 96 Mo. 39, and the cases there cited; City of Hopkins v. Railroad, 79 Mo. 98.

It has been repeatedly ruled in this state, that in a *659proceeding for the condemnation of private property for public use, every matter necessary to confer jurisdiction must appear on the face of the proeeedings, otherwise the same will be void. Zimmerman v. Snowdon, 88 Mo. 218; Railroad v. Leeright, 113 Mo. 660; Cory v. Railroad, 100 Mo. 282; Railroad v. Young, 96 Mo. 39.

In a case like this where a road overseer is seeking to justify his action under the order of the township board for the opening of a public road, the rule just stated is, as indicated by us when this case was here on a former occasion — 46 Mo. App. 460 — inapplicable beyond the point where the record discloses jurisdiction in the board to make the orders relied on.

If jurisdiction is once shown, then every intendment and presumption may be invoked in favor of validity. Walker v. Likens, 24 Mo. 298; Douglass v. Stephens, 18 Mo. 358. But in determining whether the record shows jurisdiction no such intendment or presumption is available to uphold the proceeding in condemnation cases of this nature.

If it be contended that the certified copy of the county court showing the abstract of the returns of the election, which is required to be filed with the secretary of state, is certified by the latter officer to have been so filed in his office, is prima facie evidence of the adoption of the law, then the certificate of the secretary of state introduced in evidence by defendants was not such certificate. It purports upon its face to be no more than the certificate of the abstract of the returns “as appears on file in my office,” and not a certificate of the abstract spread upon the records of the county court. There is no authority in the law itself for the making and filing of such a certificate. There was in that respect an obvious neglect of the statutory requirement.

*660It inevitably follows from these considerations that there was no sufficient foundation laid to justify the introduction in evidence of the orders of the township board, which were offered by defendants; or, in other words, such orders were primarily inadmissible to prove the allegations of the answer. Whether the record of the county court containing the abstract of the returns of the election, or the certificate of the secretary of state is prima facie evidence of the adoption of the law, the result is the same, since neither was offered in evidence.

We are not to be understood as holding that, if there be neither such record nor certificate in existence the adoption of the law may not be shown by other evidence. So far as this case is concerned, the evidence adduced does not show that the township organization law was adopted, and therefore we must hold that the township board was without jurisdiction to make the orders upon which defendants rest their defense.

If the rule of liability applicable to an officer who has received an execution is applicable to road overseers, which we think to be the case, then the law must be as we have already stated. A sheriff, it has been ruled, is bound to know the law and to take notice that he has a valid writ. Milburn v. Gilman, 11 Mo. 68. If the court had no jurisdiction over the subject-matter the officer is bound to know it, and the execution issued upon such judgment is no protection. Melcher v. Scruggs, 72 Mo. 406, and authorities cited in 46 Mo. App. 460.

It is well settled law that if a justice of the peace has jurisdiction of the subject-matter the officer whom the process is directed is not bound to examine into the validity of such process. The general principle is that executive officers, bound by the law to serve legal writs and processes, are protected in the *661rightful discharge of their duty if those precepts are sufficient in point of form and issue from a court or magistrate having jurisdiction of the subject-matter. Melcher v. Scruggs, supra; Howard v. Clark, 43 Mo. 348.

The order of the township board in the present case is sufficiently regular in form and substance and therefore the defendants’ exceptions to what was said by us in the opinion,' when the case was here before, in pointing out the defects in the order of the township •board then in the record, need not be noticed here.

This action was founded on the statute to prevent •certain trespasses — chapter 165, Revised Statutes — the jury could only assess single damages, and if a proper case was made out for trebling the damages it could only be done by the court. Walther v. Warner, 26 Mo. 148; Brewster v. Link, 28 Mo. 145; Wood v. Railroad, 58 Mo. 109. The court, by instructions numbers 1 and 2 given for plaintiff, embraced in their respective hypotheses the actionable facts alleged in each count •of the petition, but in the first told the jury if they found for the plaintiff to assess his damages at three times the value of the property injured, and the third further told them if they found for the plaintiff to assess the damages at double the amount the plaintiff had sustained with $5 added to that amount. According to the rule already stated, these instructions were erroneous in this regard.

The plaintiff’s fourth instruction was- unnecessary for the enlightenment of the minds of the jury as to any duty they were called upon to perform and should not have been given.

The fifth instruction given by the court on its own motion, which informed the jury that if the defendants’ alleged entry on plaintiff’s land was under an honest belief that they had a right to do so for the purpose *662of opening a new public road and not for the purpose of doing an intentional wrong, then tbey should find single damages only for plaintiff. It is not perceived that the rule declared in this instruction has any place in the case. If the defendants made out the defense pleaded, they were not liable and, if they did not, then they were.

If the court meant by this instruction that if defendants had probable cause to believe the land on which the alleged trespass was committed was their own, it was improper because there was no evidence on which to base it. If the defendants failed to make good the defense in their answer, then there was not shown by the evidence that probable cause which would restrict plaintiff to the recovery of single damages as provided by the statute, section 8678.

On account of errors in the instructions to which we have alluded, the judgment must be reversed and cause remanded.

All concur.