143 Mo. 63 | Mo. | 1898
On the twenty-sixth of December, 1895, the relators brought an action in the circuit court of Jackson county, at Kansas City, against the Grand Avenue Hotel Company, to recover damages for the death of their father, Fred 0. Patton, who was killed on the twenty-seventh of December, 1894, while in the service of said company, operating its boiler and furnace, by the explosion thereof. T.he cause coming on for trial'at the April term, 1896, of said court, before division number 3 thereof, after hearing all the evidence the court instructed the jury to return a verdict for the defendant company, which was accordingly done. Thereupon the plaintiffs in due time filed their motion for a new trial,,which coming on to be heard at the October term, 1896, was sustained on the ground that the court erred in instructing the jury to return a verdict for said defendant company. Thereupon the hotel. company, in due form, took an . appeal to this court from said order of the circuit court granting a new trial. Afterward, at the April term, 1897, of said circuit court, the plaintiffs, relators herein, applied to the respondent as judge of said court presiding in division number 3, by motion, for a trial of said cause notwithstanding the appeal, which motion was then and there- overruled and refused. Afterward application by petition filed on the twenty-sixth of June, 1897, was made to this court by relators for a writ of mandamus requiring the respondent to proceed with the trial of said cause notwithstanding said appeal, on the ground that no appeal bond having been given on said appeal, such proceeding was not thereby stayed. To
1. That part of the return to which the motion to strike out is directed, consists simply of the remarks made by the judge presiding in division number 3, in explanation and support of his action in sustaining the motion for a new trial, which being impertinent to the real issue tendered by the return, that motion will be sustained.
2. The question raised by the second motion is whether under the statute an appeal from an order of the circuit court granting a new trial without bond stays the trial of the cause in the circuit court, pending such appeal in the appellate court.
By the statute governing the case it is provided as follows:
“Section 2246. Any party to a suit aggrieved by any judgment of any circuit court, in any civil cause, from which an appeal is not prohibited by the Constitution, may take his appeal to a court having appellate jurisdiction from any order granting a new trial, or in arrest of judgment, or order refusing to revoke, modify or change an interlocutory order appointing a’ receiver or receivers, or dissolving an injunction, or from any interlocutory judgments in actions of partition which determine the rights of the parties, or from any final judgment in the case, or from any special order after final judgment in the cause; but a failure to appeal from any action or decision of the court before final judgment shall not prejudice the right of the party to- have the action of the trial court reviewed*67 on an appeal taken from the final judgment in the ease. The Supreme Court shall summarily hear and determine all appeals from orders refusing to revoke, modify or change an interlocutory order appointing a receiver or receivers, and for that purpose shall on motion advance the same on its docket.” Sess. Acts 1895, p. 91.
“Section 2249. Appeals shall stay execution, when. — Upon the appeal being made, the court, from which an appeal is prayed, shall make an order allowing the appeal, and such allowance thereof shall stay the execution in the following cases, and no others: First, when the appellant shall be an executor or . administrator, guardian or curator, and the action shall be by or against him as such; second, when the appellant or some responsible person for him, together with two sufficient securities, to be approved by the court, shall, during the term at which the judgment appealed from was rendered, enter into a recognizance to the adverse party, in a penalty double the amount of whatever debt, damages and costs have been recovered by such judgment, together with the interest that may accrue, thereon, and the costs and damages that may be recovered in any appellate court upon appeal, conditioned that the appellant will prosecute his appeal with due diligence to a decision in the appellate court, and shall perform such judgment as shall be given by such court, or such as the appellate court may direct the circuit court to give, and if the judgment of such court or any part thereof be affirmed, that he will comply with and perform the same, so far as it may be affirmed, and will pay all damages and costs which may be awarded against the appellant by any appellate court. 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 vaca*68 tion, 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.”
By section 2246, as it stood in the revision of 1889 and had theretofore been the law in this State, appeals were allowable only from the final judgments of circuit courts. The only condition required for granting such appeals then, as now, is that application therefor shall be made during the term at which the judgment was rendered and the appellant or his agent shall, during the same term, file in the court his affidavit stating that such appeal is not made for vexation or delay, but because the affiant believes the appellant is aggrieved by the judgment or decision of the court. R. S. 1889, sec. 2248. Thereupon it becomes the duty of the court to make an order allowing the appeal, as required by section 2246, supra. The effect of which order is to transfer the jurisdiction of the case■ from the circuit court to the appellate court, from the operation of which, however, is excepted the execution on the judgment appealed from in all cases except those stated in section 2249. In other words, the effect of the order granting the appeal is to suspend all further exercise of judicial functions in the case by the court from which the appeal is taken and to transfer the same to the- appellate court, where further judicial proceeding is continued until the caséis disposed of. Macklin v. Allenberg, 100 Mo. 337. But not to suspend those of a merely ministerial or executive character, except in the cases stated, one of which is, in case where no bond is given as required in said section. The bond does not operate at all upon the judicial functions of the court; they are