239 S.W. 867 | Mo. | 1922
This is a proceeding by mandamus to compel the judge of the Circuit Court of Mississippi County to enter judgment in accordance with the directions given by this court in reversing the judgment and remanding the cause in Bryan v. McCaskill,
February 14, 1921, George A. Burr, who had been one of the contending and unsuccessful defendants in this court, was permitted by the trial court to file an amended answer in which he averred that he had paid $75 for the land in question and, since 1916 had, in good faith, paid taxes amounting to $3,184.55, and asked judgment therefor, and that it be decreed to be a lien on the land. Robertson and wife thereafter moved the court to enter judgment in accordance with the mandate and directions of this court. This motion was overruled. The trial court then took up the issues tendered by the amended or new answer of Burr and heard Burr's testimony. Robertson and wife refused to participate in this proceeding. As a result of the hearing the court rendered a judgment which declared the title in the land in question to be vested in Robertson and wife and, in addition, adjudged that Burr was entitled to recover $3,184.55 for taxes paid "to protect the title to said land and extinguish liens thereon." This sum was, by the judgment rendered, made a lien on the land as prayed in Burr's amended answer. Burr's pleadings in the case prior to the judgment in November, 1920, in this court, did not set up any claim for taxes paid. No motion for rehearing was filed in that case after the reversal and remandment in 1920, and no claim made in this court that Burr had any equities *300 arising out of any payments made by him in the interim between the appeal and the decision mentioned.
I. It is argued that mandamus will not lie since relators might have appealed. The rule of this court is that when a judgment is directed by an appellate court it is "the imperative duty" of the trial court to enter it as directed. [State ex rel. Carson v. Lamb, 232 S.W. l.c. 984.] In that case the alternative writ was made peremptory. (a) When an appellate court directs a specific judgment and its direction becomes final and the trial court fails or refuses to comply with the direction it may be that the futility of the first direction might inclineMandate to the court to lean to some remedy other than aTrial Court: second direction, on appeal, which could haveObedience Enforced no sanction to enforce compliance with itby Mandamus. which did not accompany the first mandate issued. The "remorseless regressus" has no greater claim to welcome in the courts than elsewhere. (b) We do not hold that an appeal will not lie. In a long list of cases this court has held that it will lie, but that the sole question reviewable is whether the judgment entered conformed to the judgment directed to be entered. If it did, the judgment here has been one of affirmance (except in a case to be noted); and if it did not, the judgment here has been one of reversal and remandment which could not have been the rulings if an appeal did not lie. [Shroyer v. Nickell,
The only case which is brought to our attention in which a different ruling was made is Meyer v. Goldsmith, 196 S.W. l.c. 746. In that case it was said that "there is no appeal from a judgment entered in accordance with the mandate of an appellate court to which a case after *301
trial has been appealed." The decisions cited in support of this holding are Scullin v. Railroad,
(c) If a litigant desires to appeal from a judgment entered upon directions from an appellate court, he may do so. He can then have the question stated in Meyer v. Bobb reviewed and, perhaps, secure a second direction. If he is not willing to take the chance that a second direction will meet the fate of the first, requiring a third appeal, etc., he is entitled, under our practice, as shown by the citations already made, to a writ of mandamus enforcing the first direction, if it was not followed. [State ex rel. Carson v. Lamb, supra; State ex rel. Wattenbarger v. Lamb, 174 Mo. App. l.c. 370.]
II. It is unnecessary to determine whether a different direction might have been given if a motion for rehearing had presented the matters introduced by the amended answer referred to, nor to decide whether there are other means whereby Burr may secure relief, if he is in good conscienceMandate with entitled to it. The mandate containedSpecific Directions: specific directions. The "court had noPower of Trial Court. power to enter any other judgment, or to consider or determine other matters not included in the duty of entering the judgment as directed." [Stump v. Hornback, 109 Mo. l.c. 277; Young v. Thrasher, 123 Mo. l.c. 312; and other cases cited under I (b), supra.] *302
The alternative writ is made peremptory. All concur; Higbee and David E. Blair, JJ., in result.