231 Mo. 294 | Mo. | 1910
This is one of three suits instituted in Callaway Circuit Court on August 5,1905', severally, on each of three bonds of William D. Thomas, treasurer of State Hospital No. 1, at Pulton, to recover the amounts of sundry defalcations running through a
At the outset, we are confronted with a question of jurisdiction, not raised by counsel. If the amount in dispute be the penal sum nominated in the bond, this court has jurisdiction. If it be the shortage, this court has none. The question arises on the dual character of the judgment to be rendered in a suit on an official bond — such judgment going (secundum legem terrae) for a forfeiture of the bond in its entire penal sum, with assessment of damages and award of execution (not for the penal sum, but) for the quantum of damages so assessed. [R. S. 1909, sections 1213, 1236, 1239, 1240 and post; State to use v. Ruggles, 20 Mo. 99; State to
There is language in State ex rel. v. Emmerling, 12 Mo. App. 98, and State ex rel. Yeatman v. Fox, 15 Mo. l. c. 73, which might indicate that the penalty of the bond determines jurisdiction. In the Fox case, Judge Soott, whose fame is so justly great that his mere dicta arnot unfrequently entitled to the force and use of holdings, said: “The opinion has generally prevailed in this State, that the penalty of a bond determines the jurisdiction of the court. ’ ’ But he was there not dealing with the jurisdiction of ah appellate court hinging on the “amount in dispute,” but with that of a statutory court (St. Louis Law Commissioner’s Court) regulated by other statutory provisions; and, by way of argument, used the statute defining jurisdiction of justices of the peace over actions on constables’ bonds. What he there said must go with the facts of his case.
In State v. Emmerling, supra, Judge Thompson was dealing with the jurisdiction of justices of the peace and with a statute employing the jurisdictional phrase, “sum demanded.” Accordingly it was ruled that the “ sum demanded” was the penalty of the bond, and the question of jurisdiction hinged on that exposition.
But in State ex rel. v. St. Louis Court of Appeals, 87 Mo. 569, a case where the penal sum of the bond was $2700 and the amount of damages assessed for which execution was awarded was $2200; it was held that “the amount in dispute” on appeal was $2200, viz., the amount of damages, recovered for the breach of the bond, and not the penalty, and that the St. Louis Court of Appeals had jurisdiction and not the Supreme Court — the test of the jurisdiction at that time being $2500 in dispute. In that case the Ruggles, Cooper and Fox cases, supra, were considered and distinguished. The case is soundly reasoned and runs quatuor pedibús. Written by Norton, J., it was unanimously agreed to
In the case at bar the penalty of the bond is not in dispute. It is not even colorahly in dispute. The dispute is over the amount of Thomas’s peculations during the life of the bond and on whether or no the three years’ Statute of Limitation is a bar. In determining appellate jurisdiction, courts go for substance, not shadow; the kernel, not the shell. They look to the whole record. To do otherwise is to stick in the bark ■ — see eases supra. Here the amount in dispute is under $7500, at which figure we draw to ourselves jurisdiction in those cases where the amount in dispute determines it.
We have no jurisdiction. The case is transferred to the Kansas City Court of Appeals.