168 Mo. App. 463 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1912
On application of relators an alternative writ of mandamus was issued against the Honorable Charles Clafiin Allen, one of the judges of the circuit court of the city of St. Louis, requiring him to sign a certain bill of exceptions ■ in a cause in which one O. E. Armstrong was plaintiff and the relator Elrick and one Rankin were defendants, 'or to show cause on a day named why he should not do so. Ac
The action which is at the foundation of this controversy was instituted by Armstrong against Elrick and Rankin before a justice of the peace1 of the city of St. Louis. It appears that on the trial before the justice there was a judgment against the defendants there, from which judgment the defendant Elrick appealed to the circuit court, giving the usual appeal bond, with Kidwell, the other relator here, as surety. This cause, oh appeal, was docketed for trial in the circuit court in due course and being called for trial and the appellant Elrick not appearing, as is recited in the judgment, judgment went against him and his surety, it being set out in the judgment that appellant Elrick, although duly called, failed to appear tó prosecute his appeal, and that thereupon on motion of plaintiff the judgment of the justice was affirmed. It was thereupon adjudged that the plaintiff recover of
As before stated, the first reason assigned by the honorable circuit judge for refusing to sign the hill of exceptions is that it was untrue. This in itself is a sufficient reason, justifying a circuit judge in his refusal to sign a hill of exceptions tendered. If the return had ended with this statement ii might have ended the matter. But the learned trial judge, with great frankness and propriety sets out wherein he deems it to be untrue, and sets out the matters omitted, and designates those which he claims are improperly embodied in the bill, and it was conceded at the argument of the cause that this denial of the truth of the bill was a general statement, more in the nature of a conclusion, and that the real reasons for the refusal of the honorable circuit judge to sign the bill of exceptions
Considering the first reason, we are unable to hold it valid. The sole matter presented for the determination of the trial court was the motion of relators to set aside the judgment which had been rendered against them, and it was from the action of the court on this motion that the appeal was taken, not from the judgment which had been rendered in the cause. "What occurred at the time the judgment by default was rendered was therefore, for the consideration of this motion, immaterial, and it was unnecessary matter to incorporate in the bill of exceptions seeking to review the action of the trial court on the motion.
The other group of objections to the signing of the bill of exceptions which the honorable circuit judge makes is, that the bill tendered incorporates matters of which it is claimed the trial court took judicial notice. However that might be and however far the trial court might take judicial notice of matters occurring before it, as the case was to be presented to the appellate court, we are unable to see how this latter court can take judicial notice of matters which are not in any manner presented to it and which did not occur before it, but which occurred before the trial court, unless set out in the bill of exceptions.
Our consideration of the whole case is that the reasons given by the honorable circuit judge for his refusal to sign the bill of exceptions tendered, and a copy of which is attached to the petition for the mandamus in this case, are insufficient in law.