161 Mo. App. 296 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1912
The appeal in this case was taken before the establishment of this.court and was allowed to the Supreme Court. The bill of exceptions was signed on November 2, 1908. On October 10, 1911, J. W. Halliburton, as amicus curiae, filed in the Supreme Court a written statement to. the effect that he was attorney for the defendant in the trial court but had
This is an attempted appeal from an order sustaining a motion to quasb a writ of attachment and refusing to permit tbe plaintiff to file an amended affidavit.
Plaintiff, claiming as assignee of debts owed to some fourteen of defendant’s creditors, sued the defendant for the aggregate sum of $5,229.83, and sued out a writ of attachment in aid of bis suit. Tbe affidavit for attachment alleged as its sole ground that tbe defendant is a non-resident of tbe-state of Missouri. Tbe writ of attachment was issued and levied on a mining plant known as the Chicago Lead & Zinc Company in Jasper county, tbe return of tbe sheriff further reciting that be failed to find in this state a chief office or. place of business of tbe defendant, and failed to find any officer, agent or employee of tbe defendant corporation upon whom to serve tbe summons as commanded in tbe writ. Tbe motion to quasb tbe writ of attachment and dismiss tbe cause, filed on November 5, 1907, states as reasons, (1) that tbe writ of attachment is void and of no effect; (2) that the-clerk of tbe court bad no authority, legal or otherwise, to issue said writ; (3) that said writ was issued without any authority of law; and (4) that tbe court never acquired any jurisdiction over tbe defendant or its property. Tbe defendant appeared specially for tbe sole purpose of filing tbis motion. Tbe court sustained tbe motion on tbe authority of Farnsworth v. Railroad, 29 Mo. 75. On tbe next day tbe plaintiff appeared and in writing moved tbe court to permit bim to file an amended affidavit in tbe cause, and attached
The only judgment entered in this case is as follows :
“Now comes on for hearing the motion to set aside order of sale and to quash the writ of attachment herein; said motion is taken up and being seen, heard and fully understood by the court the- same*is sustained.
“It is therefore ordered and adjudged by the court that the attachment herein be quashed and that the order of sale heretofore entered herein be and the same is hereby set aside and for naught held and esteemed.”
It will be seen that the court only disposed of the attachment and not of the suit itself. To be effective, an appeal must operate on a final judgment, and not upon something less than a final judgment. A party cannot appeal his cause by piecemeal. [Jones v. Evans, 80 Mo. 565.] Nor .from an interlocutory order unless there is a permissive statute. The order of the court on the motion to quash the attachment was not the final disposition of the entire case in the court below; it was not a final judgment of the cause, but simply a judgment on the motion to quash the attachment leaving the main issue standing as before. [Wirt v. Dinan, 41 Mo. App. 236, 240.] “It has been long and well understood in this state that there can be but one final judgment in a cause, and that such final judgment cannot be composed of fragments. As to the defendant the judgment must relieve him from further appearance as to the entire cause. He must be permitted to go ‘without day,’ etc.” [Writ v. Dinan, supra.] It will readily be seen that the above
This suit was instituted by the plaintiff filing in the office of the clerk of the circuit court his petition and by the clerk issuing a summons. The statute (Sec. 1756, R. S. 1909) provides that “suits may be instituted in courts of record, except when the statute law of this state otherwise.provides, either . . second, by filing such petition in such office, and suing out thereon a writ of summons against the person or of attachment against the property of the defendant. The filing of a petition in a court of record, or a statement of account before a court not of record, and suing out process therein, shall be taken and deemed the commencement of a suit.” [See State ex rel. Lawrence County v. Grier Land & Mining Co., 154 Mo. App. 389, 134 S. W. 1087.] Under this statute the plaintiff properly commenced his suit; but at the same time, in addition to the original suit, he sued out a writ of attachment in aid of it by filing an affidavit and bond as required by the attachment act, upon which a writ of attachment was issued out of the circuit clerk’s office and delivered to the sheriff and by him levied upon the defendant’s property. But no personal service of the writ of summons was had nor was any service had by publication as provided in case of non-residence. Now, when the writ of attachment was quashed, the original suit remained still pending, and the plaintiff might still have filed another affidavit and bond and have had an additional writ of attachment issued; or he might have had an alias writ of summons issued and the suit could thus proceed. At the time the court sustained the motion to quash and quashed the writ of attachment, the plaintiff, if he desired to take an appeal, had the usual remedy in cases of involuntary