22 Mo. App. 435 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1886
I. Defendant’s first objection is that he should have been re-arraigned after his motion to quash was overruled, and before the jury was sworn, on the ground that his motion to quash operated as a with-' drawal of his plea theretofore entered. It will be observed, from the statement, that he wsis regularly arraigned and his plea ,of not guilty entered at the special term on May 28th, and that afterwards at the regular June term, he filed his motion to quash the information without first obtaining leave of court.
On this motion being overruled, and after the jury was sworn, defendant was again arraigned against his objection and exception. Generally matters of demurrer are waived by a plea to the merits. Though in practice, both civil and criminal, the answer of plea of not guilty is frequently withdrawn and a demurrer filed. They are inconsistent pleading and do not stand together, and a demurrer, when filed after a plea to the merits, would doubtless operate as a withdrawal of that plea. So too, at this day, motions to quash, in most instances, and demurrers, are without distinction. A motion to quash may reach outside the record and is only reviewable by being made a part of the record by a bill of exceptions. State v. Wall, 15 Mo. 208.
Allowing, then, the same rule to operate on a motion to quash, when it is in the nature of a demurrer, it would still not aid defendant’s objection. He denominated his motion, as a motion to quash the information, whereas it is in fact merely a plea in abatement, on the ground of the pendency of another information. It is the only
The motion, then, being merely a plea in abatement, should not have been entertained by the court, and it did not have the effect of withdrawing the original plea of not guilty. The second arrraignment, though improper after the jury was sworn, was unnecessary.
II. The offer of proof of the establishment of a public road by the county court at another place, and that the road overseer had, by mistake, worked the road on defendant’s land, was for the purpose of showing that the defendant had not dedicated the road in question. On the question of dedication the evidence would have been relevant, but no such question is presented in the state’s case; it is a question of adverse possession only. For this reason the court properly excluded the testimony.
III. The first instruction for the state is complained of for the reason that it did not, in terms, require the adverse user by the public to be continuous and uninterrupted for the statutory period of limitation. The instruction, as framed, would appear at first glance to be supported by the State v. Walters (69 Mo. 465), in which case the language of the opinion would lead one to believe these words unnecessary. I think, however, the court, in that case, was criticising the action of the lower court in directing the jury that the period of limitation was twenty, instead of ten years, and did not intend to assert the doctrine, that there may be an adverse possession which has not been continuous or uninterrupted. For it is familiar law, that if the adverse occupancy is once broken, the period of limitation begins anew, as though there had- been no prior possession. Notwithstanding
“7. Unless the jury believe from the evidence that defendant has obstructed a track which has been continuously and uninterruptedly used, and adversely occupied by the public as a public road for a period» of ten years or more prior to the alleged obstruction, they will find the defendant not guilty.”
There is no just ground to believe that the jury was misled by these instructions when taken together.
IY. There is no merit in the sixth objection, for the reason that the special judge was chosen by agreement under section 1880, Revised Statutes. No order for an election was necessary, and as the agreement itself disclosed the regular judge’s disqualification there was no necessity of that judge having it entered of record. The statute nowhere requires it.
Y. The objection that the special judge did not take the proper oath on assuming the duties of his office, is plausible, to say the least. He is required by section 1879, Revised Statutes, to subscribe to an oath that he will try the cause “without fear, favor, or partiality.”
These words were omitted in the oath taken. The oath taken is the one prescribed by section six, article fourteen, of the state constitution, which is that “all officers, both civil and military, under the authority of this state, shall, before entering upon the duties of their respective offices, take and subscribe an oath or affirmation, to support the constitution of the United States and of this state, and to demean themselves faithfully in office.”
It cannot well be contended that the words of the oath prescribed by the statute shall be literally followed; and the real question is, is not the oath required by the constitution, and which was taken by the judge in this case, of the exact import of the one required by the statute. The constitutional oath is, that he will faithfully demean himself in office; the statutory oath is,
YI. As the state seeks to establish the legality of the road solely by adverse user, I am of the opinion that the court below should have permitted defendant to prove that his grantor was a married woman who had married in 1868, and who had owned the land on which the obstructed road ran, since 1861. That she was a minor at the beginning of her ownership in 1861, and was yet a minor when she married in 1868, and that she and her husband, conveyed to defendant in 1883, less than three years before he is charged to have fenced and taken possession of. the road. If all of the state’s evidence showed the adverse use by the public began prior to the time when defendant’s grantor married, the court’s action in excluding the testimony offered, would have been correct, because, notwithstanding it began while she was an infant, and that she married while not yet of age, yet the two disabilities of infancy and coverture could not be tacked. But that portion of the testimony showing the adverse occupancy began before defendant’s grantee’s marriage, may not have been credited by the .jury, while that showing an occupancy for more than ten years since the marriage and before the obstruction, may have been the evidence upon which the jury based the verdict. If the occupation by the public was begun after defendant’s grantor married, limitation would not run in favor of the public until the removal of this disability, and she would have three years after its removal, or her grantee would have three years after sale to him,
The fact that the husband was entitled to the possession of her land does not alter the case. His action os acquiescence could not estop her.
The effect of section 3295, Revised Statutes, is to deprive the husband of his common law marital rights, so far as any power to convey during coverture the “rents, issues and products, or of any interest in such real estate” unless by deed, etc; This doctrine applies-as well to matters set up as estoppel in pais as to deeds or other conveyances. Kanaga v. Ry. Co., 76 Mo. 207, overruled ; Mueller v. Kaessman, 84 Mo. 318.
For the error in excluding the coverture and ownership of defendant’s grantor the judgment will b© reversed and the cause remanded.