129 Mo. App. 511 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1908
This is an original suit in mandamus to compel the respondent, one of the judges of the Jackson Circuit Court, to proceed with all convenient speed, to render judgment in an agreed case submitted to him under the provisions of section 793, Revised Statutes 1899. The cause is before us on the alternative writ, respondent’s return thereto, relator’s answer and a supplemental return filed by respondent after hearing and submission.
The conceded facts are as follow's: Respondent is the duly elected, qualified and acting judge of Division No. 4 of the circuit court of Jackson county. His term of office began on the first day of January, 1905. On November 3.2, 1903, during the incumbency of his predecessor, the relator E. T. Webb and George Peake, receiver of the Siegel-Sanders Live Stock Commission Company, filed an agreed case in that division of the court. The stipulation was verified by the affidavit of the attorneys of the respective parties “that there is a real controversy between George Peake, Receiver, aforesaid, and E. T. Webb, as above set out, and that said controversy is in good faith and for the above amount of money and this agreement is in good faith brought to determine which party is entitled to the aforesaid sum of money.” Among the stipulations was one “that nothing herein contained shall be so construed as to prevent either party from appealing from the judgment of the court rendered herein.”
In due time, the questions of law presented by the agreed facts were argued and the cause was submitted to the judge then in office who took it under advisement
When this motion came up for hearing, counsel for relator objected to its consideration on the ground that the court had no jurisdiction either to permit any alteration or amendment of the agreed facts or to permit one of the parties, over the objection of the other, to withdraw from the agreement. The respondent, however, heard the motion and overruled it. He states, in his return, that this action was prompted by the conclusion “that the relief sought by said motion to withdraw submission could be granted only upon a bill in equity to set aside the contract of submission.”
On the 2d day of P'ebruary, 1907, Peake, the receiver, filed a petition in equity in said Division No. 4, against relator for the.purpose of obtaining the cancellation of the contract of submission. The facts pleaded as ground for the relief in substance were the same as those contained in the motions to which Ave have referred. It Avas not alleged that relator practiced any fraud or deception on the receiver whereby the latter Avas kept in ignorance of the fact to which so. much importance is attached, nor that the omission of that fact from the agreed statement was the result of mutual mistake. The receiver predicates his right to relief solely on the allegation that he Avas “excusably ignorant” of the existence of the omitted fact at the time he became a party to the. contract to submit tin cause. The fact is made to appear quite clearly that re
The argument of relator in support of his right 'to such relief may be condensed into two general propositions: First, That the facts embodied in an agreement to submit a cause under section 793 of the statutes are not open to alteration or amendment at the instance oí either party and against the objection of the other in any form of procedure; nor has either party the right to annul the agreement except on the showing, to be made by suit in equity, that the contract was the product • of fraud or mutual mistake as those terms are defined in equitable actions for the cancellation or reformation of contracts. Second, That since the petition filed by the receiver for the equitable cancellation of the contract omits to allege that the petitioner was induced to enter into the contract of submission by reason of any fraudulent practice or misrepresentation on the part of relator, or that the omission of an important fact from the agreed statement was the result of mutual mistake, no cause of action is presented and, therefore, respondent was without legal justification for his decision to postpone the consideration of the agreed case until after he had disposed of the equity suit.
Respondent has presented no brief, but we gather from the pleadings filed by him that in what he has done he claims to have acted within the scope of his jurisdiction and that if error has been committed, it may be reviewed and corrected only in the ordinary course of procedure, i. e., by appeal or writ of error, and does not afford ground for the application of an extraordi
It follows that respondent properly interpreted the law in overruling the motion filed by the receiver in
Relator admits a contract to submit an agreed case may be canceled in equity on a showing that it was procured by fraud or duress or that through mutual mistake it fails to express the actual agreement. That this admission is well grounded in law cannot be doubted. A contract of this nature is governed by the rules and principles applicable to any other solemn contract such as a deed, bond or the like, and no more reason could be given for withholding relief from the results of fraud, imposition or mutual mistake than could be urged against the cancellation or reformation of a deed on similar ground. Had the petition in the equity suit brought by the receiver stated a cause of action for the cancellation of the contract, it is manifest the admission of relator we have noted would force him to concede that respondent justly could not do otherwise than to withhold his judgment in the agreed case until after it should be judicially ascertained whether or not the agreement of submission should stand. But relator argues that since that petition failed to state a canse of action for equitable relief, respondent should have disregarded it, and his failure to do so should be pronounced a judicial excess. We do not agree with this contention. Respondent, by the bringing in his court of an equitable action for the cancellation of the agreed statement on the ground of mistake, became possessed of jurisdiction over the parties and the subject-matter. The question of whether the facts alleged sufficiently stated a cause of action was primarily one for him to determine. We must presume that if the pleading is insufficient in the respect claimed, respondent, on a proper