70 S.W.2d 899 | Mo. | 1934
Lead Opinion
This case, coming to the writer by reassignment, is an action by a guardian and curator for personal injuries to his ward, a person of unsound mind, who was struck by an automobile driven by defendant Melton as chauffeur and employee of the other defendants. The jury returned the following verdict:
"We, the jury, find for the plaintiff and against the defendants, D.M. Oberman Manufacturing Company, a corporation, and D.M. Oberman, and assess plaintiff's damages at the sum of $4,000, and we further find in favor of the defendant, Charles Melton."
Judgment was entered upon this verdict reciting it and other preliminary proceedings and concluding as follows:
"It is therefore ordered and adjudged by the Court that the plaintiff have and recover of and from the defendants D.M. Oberman Manufacturing Company, a corporation, and D.M. Oberman, the sum of Four Thousand Dollars ($4000), the damages so assessed by the jury as aforesaid, together with all costs of this cause, and that execution issue therefor.
"It is further ordered and adjudged by the Court that the plaintiff take nothing by his writ against the defendant Charles Melton, and that judgment herein be for said defendant, Charles Melton, and that said defendant, Charles Melton, recover of and from the plaintiff his costs in his behalf made and expended, and that he have execution issued therefor."
Timely motions for new trial and in arrest were filed, the disposition of which is shown by the following orders:
"Now on this day comes the plaintiff herein, by his attorneys, and calls up for hearing his motion for new trial heretofore filed in this cause, and the same being seen and heard by the court is overruled.
"Also comes the defendant D.M. Oberman Manufacturing Company, and calls up for hearing its motion for a new trial heretofore filed in this cause, and the same being seen and heard by the court is overruled.
"Also comes the defendant D.M. Oberman, by his attorneys, and calls up for hearing his motion for new trial heretofore filed in this cause, and the same being seen and heard by the court is overruled.
"Also comes the D.M. Oberman Manufacturing Company, by its attorneys, and calls up for hearing its motion in arrest of judgment heretofore filed in this cause, and the same being seen and heard by the court is sustained.
"Also comes the defendant D.M. Oberman, by his attorneys, and calls up for hearing his motion in arrest of judgment heretofore filed in this cause, and the same being seen and heard by the court is sustained. *1080
"It is therefore ordered and adjudged by the Court that the judgment heretofore entered in this cause be, and the same is arrested as to the defendants D.M. Oberman Manufacturing Company and D.M. Oberman, and that said judgment is for naught held as to said defendants D.M. Oberman and D.M. Oberman Manufacturing Company, but that said judgment remain in full force and effect as otherwise entered."
Thereafter, plaintiff filed an affidavit for appeal in statutory form and appeal was granted to this court. Defendants D.M. Oberman Manufacturing Company and D.M. Oberman appealed from the orders overruling their motions for a new trial, but these appeals have been abandoned. These defendants have filed a motion to transfer this cause to the Kansas City Court of Appeals "because the only question before the court on this appeal is whether or not the trial court erred in arresting the judgment as to D.M. Oberman Manufacturing Company and D.M. Oberman, and as the amount of the judgment was only Four thousand dollars ($4,000) this appeal is within the jurisdiction of the Kansas City Court of Appeals."
[1] The right of appeal in actions at law did not exist at common law but is conferred by statute. [2 R.C.L. 27, sec. 2; 3 C.J. 299, sec. 3.] It is a familiar rule that the right of appeal exists, therefore, only where the statute provides for it and that a compliance with mandatory statutory procedure is essential. [Pence v. Kansas City Laundry Co.,
[2] Since our statute only recognizes a motion in arrest of judgment without defining it, the character of such a motion must be determined by the common law. [State ex rel. Conant v. Trimble,
Plaintiff asks us to "either order the original judgment reinstated against the defendants, Oberman Manufacturing Company and D.M. Oberman, or remand the case for a new trial against all of the defendants." We cannot, on this appeal from the order in arrest, do either. Originally, at common law an unconditional order sustaining a motion in arrest ended the case, no further judgment could be entered, each party paid his own costs, and the plaintiff was at liberty to proceed de novo in a new action. [3 Blackstone's Commentaries (Lewis Ed.) 393; State ex rel. Bond v. Fisher,
Therefore, according to the practice approved by this court, after judgment is arrested plaintiff may ask nothing further, in which case, when the term ends the order in arrest amounts to a dismissal. Plaintiff may thereafter commence a new action within one year. However, plaintiff may ask to amend and have a new trial, if the defect is one which may be thus remedied. Plaintiff may even amend and have the same judgment "when the same amendment might have been made before trial" where "a cause of action is stated, but inaptly or imperfectly." [217 S.W. l.c. 1005.] On the other hand, plaintiff may have the final judgment go against him, appeal and bring up the whole case; or, now that our statute grants an appeal from the order in arrest (see Laws 1891, p. 70), he may appeal from that order. Can there be any doubt about which of these various possible courses plaintiff has taken in this case?
[4] While a judgment was here entered immediately after verdict, as is the common practice in this State, it was merely interlocutory, not final, and filing the motion in arrest within four days prevented it, becoming final. [Cox v. Schaab Stove
Furniture Co.,
The effect was the same as though the clerk had awaited action on the motions before entering any judgment. As the case then stood, there was remaining only an interlocutory judgment in favor of the chauffeur and two defendants undisposed of by any judgment. A judgment disposing of the chauffeur alone could not be more than interlocutory, whether entered before or after action on the motions. In this situation, the several courses above stated were open to the plaintiff. Plaintiff might have let the term end without action, in which even the order in arrest would have amounted to a dismissal as to the two employers and the judgment would have become final in favor of the chauffeur. It would seem here that then the matter of the chauffeur's negligence (upon which liability of his employers on the cause of action stated in the petition would necessarily be based) would be res judicata, and that under the peculiar circumstances of this case plaintiff's right to bring another suit against the employers would be worthless. Plaintiff could, however, have moved for the entry of a final judgment against him and in favor of all the defendants, from which he could have appealed and presented for determination his right to a complete new trial. (In the absence of an appeal from the order in arrest, the court could have properly entered such a judgment of its own motion.) Plaintiff had still another course open to him and this he took, namely, to exercise the alternative statutory right of appeal before final judgment from the order in arrest. By appealing therefrom, he prevented the entry of a final judgment disposing of all three defendants upon the merits. If this is not true, what reason could there have been for the Legislature granting the right of appeal from an order in arrest? If plaintiff has not here appealed from the order in arrest, before a final judgment was entered, how could anyone ever do so? This court has no authority to decide, on an appeal from an order in arrest, questions which could only arise on an appeal from a final judgment, where, as here, no final judgment has been actually entered. Since the right of appeal depends upon statutory authority, an appellant must show, by the record, the actualentry of a judgment, from which the statute grants an appeal upon which the questions he seeks to have determined can arise, before we can consider them.
This appeal places plaintiff in the anomalous position of appealing from the order in arrest of judgment but at the same time saying it was proper. Plaintiff admits that on the record proper the judgment entered cannot stand, saying:
"The petition herein predicated liability against the corporate defendant and its president on the theory that they were responsible for the acts of their agent and servant in operating their automobile. . . . It is established law in this State that where a master or principal is sought to be rendered liable by reason of the negligent acts of his servant or agent and not because of any primary *1084 negligence on the part of the master or principal, it is prerequisite to a judgment against the master or principal that the agent or servant be convicted of negligence. . . . Inasmuch as the jury evidently intended for the plaintiff to have a verdict in this case and as they nullified their own judgment in finding in favor of the servant, the verdict should be set aside and the plaintiff granted a new trial."
What plaintiff really wants is a new trial on the merits against all of the defendants. His appeal is premature for a determination of that question. Plaintiff also overlooks the fact that although no judgment exists yet as to the employers (because none was entered after arrest) there is a verdict and a judgment thereon in favor of the employee. That stands in the way of a new trial of the whole case, after an arrest of judgment as to part of the defendants. [See Gilstrap v. Felts,
The question for decision on this appeal is whether the court was *1085 right in sustaining the motions in arrest. If it be determined that the court was wrong then plaintiff would be entitled to have his judgment re-entered for the amount stated in the verdict, $4000. If it be determined the court was right then the order of the court arresting the judgment would be affirmed "and the cause shall again proceed according to the practice of the court." [Sec. 1006, R.S. 1929.] In this case the next step could be the entry of a final judgment from which plaintiff may appeal to this court if he so desires.
[5] It follows that the amount in controversy on this appeal is only $4000; that there is nothing to give this court jurisdiction of this appeal from the trial court's order in arrest of judgment; and that the motion to transfer must be sustained.
The cause is transferred to the Kansas City Court of Appeals.Ferguson, C., concurs; Sturgis, C., dissents.
Addendum
The foregoing opinion by HYDE, C., is adopted as the opinion of the court. All the judges concur, except Hays, J., absent.