168 Mo. App. 29 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1912
One William Good, at the relation and to the use of Abe Gordon, commenced Lis action before a justice of the peace of St. Francois county, for damages alleged to Lave accrued to 'Mm on the breach of a bond said to have been executed by Goodman & Co., the United States Fidelity •& Guaranty Co., and Merrill PipMn. Summons was issued, returned as served as to some of the defend
Afterwards at the November, 1911, adjourned term of the circuit court of St. Francois county, the defendants filed their motion setting out that judgment had been rendered in the justice’s court in December, 1911, for plaintiff and that within ten days thereafter the defendants filed affidavit for appeal, together with a good and sufficient bond, and that notwithstanding the filing of the bond and affidavit, the justice refused to grant and allow an appeal to the
Afterwards, and at the succeeding May, 1912, term the defendants, by leave of court, filed an amended affidavit for appeal. This amended affidavit states “that the application for an appeal from the merits in the above cause is not made for vexation or delay but because he (affiant) believes the appellants, -are injured by the judgment of the justice herein. Affiant further states that this appeal is from the merits of the cause. ’ ’ After filing this amended^ affidavit, and apparently during the same May term, the defendants served on plaintiff’s attorney notice of' the appeal. This on the 4th of June, 1912, and during the May term. On the 13th of June and during-the May term, 1912, o,f the circuit court the following proceedings were had in the cause, namely:
“Abe Gordon, Plaintiff, v. I. Goodman & Company,. Defendants. — -Certified J. P.
“Now at this day the court of its own motion orders an entry nunc pro tunc correcting the record herein and that the entry of record of this court ón January 29, 1912, which read as follows, ‘Now comes defendant and files its motion to make a rule, order and attachment upon O. M. Bonney, justice -of the peace-*32 of Perry township, St. Francois county, requiring said Justice to grant an appeal of this cause to the circuit court, said motion being seen and heard; it is ordered that the case.be certified to this court by said O. M. Bonney,’ be corrected and reformed so as to read nunc pro tunc or now for then as follows: ‘Now comes defendant and files its motion to make a rule, order and attachment upon O. M. Bonney, justice of the peace of Perry township, St. Francois county, requiring said justice to grant an appeal of this cause to the circuit court, said motion being seen and heard, it is ordered that the case be certified to this court by said justice O. M. Bonney for examination and review by this court, and now it is further adjudged that this court has no jurisdiction to order the appeal herein to be granted.’ ”
The defendants in the court below thereupon presented to this court a petition for certiorari to issue to the circuit court requiring it to send up the record and files in the cause. We issued the writ as prayed for, and the return of the circuit court being duly made, sets out the foregoing as the record in the case. »
In the recent ease of State ex rel. Evans v. Broaddus et al., Judges, 149 S. W. 473, not yet officially reported, our Supreme' Court has held that where an appeal or writ of error does not lie, “certiorari does ■not go as a right, but it goes in. such cases in order that profert of the challenged record be made to be searched for jurisdictional defects; that is, orders, judgments, and parts of judgments without (or in ■excess of) the jurisdiction of the subordinate court making or rendering them. . . . Certiorari does not take the place of mandamus to compel the making of a record; but it takes the record as it finds it, excluding the mere evidence which can, in the nature of things, relate to the merits only, tending to show, as it does, that the court erred in its judgment. The office of the writ is not to review error of that sort.”
The proceeding before the trial conrt in this case was. under section 7573, Revised Statutes 1909. It has been held by our conrt in Morris v. Scherer, 76 Mo. App. 401, l. c. 406, that proceedings under this ■ section, triable before the court without a jury, are not reviewable on appeal as to the finding of fact, but no ■decision that we are aware of holds that they cannot be reviewed on questions of law, by either appeal or writ of error. The action of the trial conrt in the case at bar was in effect a denial of the motion made before it for an order on the justice to grant an appeal. 'That was a final disposition of the cause by the cir•cuit court. "While it is true that no formal judgment ■appears then to have been entered up, that does not •change the fact that the court denied the prayer of the motion — the relief sought. On proper motion a formal judgment to that effect could undoubtedly have been entered. At all events, while the motion of the relators here, made in the circuit court, was for an •order on the justice requiring him to grant an appeal, the circuit court declined to issue an attachment or make an order granting an appeal. Nor did it ever make any such order. Even in the original order as «entered, it does not, “by rule and attachment, compel the justice to allow the (appeal) and to return his proceedings in the suit, together with the papers required to be returned by him,” (section 7573), but orders “that the case be certified to this court by said justice . . . for examination and review, in order that the court may determine whether the appeal herein should be granted.” When the court subsequently •entered up a nunc pro tuno order, it did not order an appeal but, following its former order, ordered that the case be certified “for examination and review,?’
As before noted it does not appear that any further order was entered in the cause by the court. If it be argued that the' omission of a formal and final judgment precludes an appeal, then such omission is equally fatal on certiorari, for that writ reaches onty to cases in which there are final orders or judgments. We do not think that the omission of a formal order is of substance here. It was open to correction; co-uld have been supplied. Its omission does not change the fact that the court did deny the relief sought by relators here, defendants below. That order denying the rule for an appeal was a final disposition of the case, and authorized an appeal or writ of error.
Coming to the exact point in decision in this case, we hold that where application is made under the provisions of section 7573, Revised Statutes 1909, for rule and attachment to compel the justice to allow an appeal and return his proceedings in an action, together with the papers required to be returned by him, and the circuit court refuses the rule, the action and the ruling of the court on that application is appealable or can be brought before the appellate court on writ of error.
Causes arising under what is now section 7573 have been before the appellate courts several times. In all of them to which our attention has been directed the proceedings in the circuit court have been considered on appeal. [See Kelm v. Hunkler, 49 Mo. App. 664; Morris v. Scherer, supra; Hagerty v. Lierly, 109 Mo. App. 631, 83 S. W. 542; Bader v. Jones, 119 Mo. App; 685, 96 S. W. 305; Leeper v. Carter, 137 Mo. App. 617, 119 S. W. 463.] Being appealable, certiorari does not lie.'' .....
• ■ - It follows that the writ, of certiorari issued herein should be and it is quashed.'