147 Mo. App. 324 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1910
This opinion is delivered on an application to this court for a writ of mandamus to re- , spondent, clerk of the circuit court of the city of St. Louis, directing him to issue an execution on a judgment recovered by relator, November 26, 1909, in Division No. 7, of said court, for the sum of $890.13, against the Supreme Tribe of Ben Hur, a corporation. The alternative writ was waived and the case submitted on a demurrer to the petition for said writ. The substance of the petition will appear from the recital of the facts of the controversy. After the rendition of the judgment a motion for new trial was filed in due time, overruled January 24, 1910, one of the days of the regular December term, 1909, an affidavit for appeal filed
“Provided, however, that the court may, at the time of granting an appeal, by order of record, fix the amount of the appeal bond and allow appellant time in vacation, not exceeding ten days, to file the same, subject to the approval of the clerk, and such appeal bond, approved by the clerk and filed within the time specified in such order, shall have the effect to stay the execution thereafter, and if any execution shall have been taken prior to the filing of said bond, the same shall be released/* [R. S. 1899, sec. 809. ]
Before the amendment was enacted, it had been held a bond taken and approved after the adjournment of the term at which judgment was' rendered, did not stay execution. [Long v. Disner, 72 Mo. 655; Julian v. Rogers, 87 Mo. 229.] In other cases it was held an appeal bond that did not comply with the statutory requirements would not operate as a supersedeas. [State ex rel. v. Vogel, 6 Mo. App. 526.] The amending statute dealt with several sections of the Practice Act relating to appeals and provided among other things, for the filing of bills of exceptions after the term at which the exceptions were taken, either in the court or with the clerk in vacation, and also for the filing of an appeal bond in vacation, not exceeding ten days after the term. [Session Acts 1885, p. 214.] Counsel for relator argues that as an appeal bond filed prior to the amendment did not stay execution unless the statutory provisions then in force were complied with, so one filed in vacation since the amendment will not stay execution, unless the amendment is strictly observed. Continuing this line of reasoning, said counsel insists no bond could be approved in vacation unless the court, at the time of granting the appeal, had fixed the amount of the
We take up next the contention that the statute authorized the approval of the“bond after the term at
It should be stated that although the court allowed fifteen days after the appeal in question was granted in which to file the bond, it was actually filed within ten days from the adjournment of the term. It should be stated also no question is made about the amount of the bond or the sufficiency and responsibility of the sureties.
The writ of mandamus will be denied.