174 Mo. App. 360 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1913
This is an original proceeding in this court whereby relator seeks, through our writ of mandamus, to compel respondent, as judge of the circuit court of Sullivan county, Missouri, to obey the mandate of this court issued in the cause of Wattenbarger v. Payne, reported in 162 Mo. App. 434. An alternative writ was issued and return thereto has been made. Relator, concluding that the return presented no defense to the alternative writ, has filed a motion for judgment that the writ be made peremptory.
The immediate question before us arose on relator’s motion or suggestion in the circuit court to carry out the mandate of this court. The return discloses clearly the theory which has governed the action of the trial court throughout the proceedings. The order of this court, when the judgment was rendered was that the judgment of the circuit court would be reversed and the cause remanded to that court with directions to it “to find for the plaintiff the sum shown to be due” him as such guardian. The return shows a refusal to obey this direction and the reasons entertained in justification of the refusal. The reasons may be said to be two in number — one that this court did not determine that any sum was due the guardian — that it merely determined that she was entitled to the legacy left to her father, discharged of his indebtedness to the grandfather. The other was that it could not determine or pass upon the amount due relator, since the estate was yet in course of administration and the probate court was the only court which could carry out the mandate of this court and therefore it (the circuit court) ordered the case transferred back to the probate court with directions to the latter court “to ascertain the condition of the estate, and find exactly what is the amount due this child and then enter judgment for it.”
The return shows that that court refused to follow the directions of the circuit court and that it proceeded
The evidence on the part of the executor was the will and his oral testimony. ■ The return further showed that the court found the evidence of the executor was true and that it was not affected by the pleadings in the cause and the several settlements made by the executor. The court considered that the petition and answer upon which the cause had been heard originally by the probate court and then, successively, on appeal, by the circuit court and this court, were not a concession that five thousand dollars was due relator’s ward if she was not cut out by the indebtedness of her father to her grandfather. The court further found, as stated by the executor in his testimony, that he had not cash funds of the estate to exceed $150, and that the large bálances shown in favor of the estate in his settlements were not cash, but were “notes and property.”
The return then sets up a colloquy between the court and counsel immediately following the overruling of the motion, in which the court stated that in its opinion the probate Gourt should ascertain what was due relator’s ward and compel a settlement of the estate. Then counsel for relator said, ‘ ‘ There can be no question under directions of the Court of Appeals but what this ward should have been paid $5000.” The court answered: “The opinion may have been written on that assumption, but that wasn’t the question presented, that wasn’t the question being argued and
The circuit court then again refused to follow the directions contained in the mandate of this court and again ordered the case transferred to the probate court; whereupon relator, in behalf of his ward, instituted this proceeding.
It will be observed from the foregoing that the respondent, as judge of the circuit court, did not consider the right of relator’s ward to the sum of $5000 had been adjudicated by this court; and as it had not he, as such circuit court, could not do so, since that, .in his opinion, was the province of the probate court. We have therefore undertaken to inquire if there is a sound basis for that view. And first we will remark the total misunderstanding of the directions of this court. We did not cast upon the trial court the duty to try and to determine what sum was due relator’s ward. That had clearly appeared from the start and as the trial court had found against her we reversed the judgment and directed that it find for her in the-sum which had been confessed to be due her.
When relator’s appeal from the probate court to the circuit court was heard by the latter, it could and should have rendered any judgment on that appeal which the probate court could and should have rendered; and failing in that, this court, in the exercise of appellate authority, could direct it to do so. What the judgment of the probate court should have been, under the law that the child took the legacy of her father without being charged with her father’s debt to the testator, is made quite plain by the pleadings of
The answer to this petition was in the following words:
“Reuben Payne, executor of the will of Addison Payne, for his answer to the petition and motion of J. M. Wattenbarger, curator of Ruth I. Payne, for partial distribution, says that said curator is not at
These pleadings show clearly an allégation of $5000 being due relator’s ward as her distributive share under the partial distribution set out therein; and they show a denial of that claim only for the reason that her deceased father, as original legatee, died owing the testator more than his legacy, and for that reason only the court should refuse to order him.to pay her as he had the others. The specific sum alleged to be due stood confessed, unless it was can-celled by the debt her father owed the testator which was set up as the reason he had not paid her as he had the others. > So, .on appeal to the circuit court, the facts were agreed upon in which the sole defense claimed was that the ward was not entitled to the $5000 claimed, on account of her father being indebted to the testator. And so the trial judge understood it, for it is recited in the judgment itself that the court,' “after being fully advised in the premises, doth find that the estate of Daniel S. Payne, the father of the minor Ruth I. Payne, is insolvent and that the said estate is in.
The extreme length to which the executor went in his effort to avoid the legitimate -result of his defeat in the litigation between himself and relator, well illustrates the frailty of his reasoning and the absurdity of his claim. He testified that notwithstanding he had made four annual settlements in the probate, court, each of which showed a large cash balance of many thousands of dollars in his hands belonging to the estate, after deducting the distributions mentioned and his commission of five per cent on $49,416.76 (the one at the time relator asked for his ward’s share showed $19,136), yet that he had no cash save perhaps $150. That though he reported sales of real estate ostensibly for cash at prices ranging from $23,460.80 down to $950, that this was sold on time and notes taken for the principal part of the purchase money.,
He was thus allowed to traverse his sworn settlements — his pleading — his continued admission throughout the length of the litigation. He was allowed to show that white was black, that cash was credit, and that a prosperous estate with large cash balances, was a myth. These things should not have concerned the trial court. The executor had chosen his ground and laid out his course without that court’s knowledge and it is in nowise responsible for his action except to see that he abides by it. The executor," if he had any reason, aside from the legal question, for refusal to pay over this, child’s share, should not have held it back and relied upon only one as the reason he had not paid her. He cannot be allowed to divide up his different defenses and demand that relator shall sue him as many times as his defenses may number. One case should end the controversy over all matters then existing. [Emmert v. Aldridge, 231 Mo. 124; Spratt v. Early, 199 Mo. 491, 500; Donnell v. Wright, 147 Mo. 639, 647.]
Though the original ease was in the probate court, formal pleadings were filed and his plea does not deny (nor, as we have shown, was there ever any denial) generally or specially, the allegations of the petition setting up the ward’s right to the distributive share paid the others. It is stated in such plea that she was not entitled to the sum of $5000 “for that because” she did not take from her grandfather testator by inheritance, but from her father by virtue of the statute; “and for that because” her father, if living, would not be entitled to a distributive share on account of his indebtedness to the testator, she being only entitled
These views show that the trial court has misunderstood the direction given to the circuit court in the words “to find for the plaintiff the sum shown to he due,” else it doubtless would have immediately rendered judgment that the executor distribute and pay over to the relator for the use of his ward the sum of five thousand dollars and interest from the day (at least) of relator’s petition to the probate court. This misunderstanding of the direction of this court probably arose from the fact that the personnel of the trial court changed, the newly elected judge who received the mandate not being the judge who tried the case. These views also relieve the case of the embarrassment suggested by the trial court in it being required to enter into a trial and investigation as to the sum due the ward. That, as has been herein explained, has been all along ascertained and admitted. And when it received the mandate of this court, it had no power or authority to go outside of or beyond the directions given, or to do otherwise than as therein required to do. [Stump v. Hornback, 109 Mo. 272, 277; Rees v. McDaniel, 131 Mo. 681; Fanning v. Doan, 146 Mo. 98.]
But it is suggested that the return shows another matter which should deprive relator of the right to demand that the circuit court comply with the directions of this court. Which matter is stated to be the right to appeal; and that when the circuit court refused to comply with such directions and transferred
It is true that mandamus will not be permitted to perform the office of an appeal, and does not lie when an appeal affords a remedy (State ex rel. v. Fort, 180 Mo. l. c. 108, 109; State ex rel. v. Lubke, 85 Mo. 338; State ex rel. v. Buhler, 90 Mo. 560; State ex rel. v. County Court, 109 Mo. 248); and will not be issued to compel a certain judgment to be rendered. [State ex rel. v. Smith, 105 Mo. 6.]
But these rules of law are founded on the. assumption that the matter in controversy is a proper subject of trial and judgment thereon in the tribunal complained of. If it were necessary to appeal from the refusal of a judicial tribunal to perform its duties in. relation to matters already fixed, determined and adjudicated, the use of the writ of mandamus would be greatly lessened and its benefits much curtailed. In instances like the present, the interested party would be denied the privilege of suggesting to the court that it carry out directions given by an appellate court, except upon condition that he forfeit his right to mandamus in case of refusal. Certainly the continuous and persistent insistence of the relator that respondent perform the directions of this court ought not to bar him of the only effective remedy left him. If peremptory directions of an appellate court to a trial court must become the subject of trial and readjudication in that court and another appeal taken, and then another, where would be the end?
The motion for judgment will therefore be sustained, and since the sum shown to be due in the original case was five thousand dollars, and since interest should run-on that sum, at least frohi the 10th of February, 1910, the time of filing relator’s petition in the probate court asking that that sum be distributed and paid to him for his ward, we will direct that a peremptory writ be issued commanding respondent to enter,, judgment in favor of relator for that sum of money with interest at six per cent per annum from that date.