230 S.W. 365 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1921
In this case plaintiff's original petition was demurred to and the demurrer was sustained. Thereupon plaintiff asked and obtained leave to file an amended petition and afterward, within the time allowed, duly filed the same. Upon this being done, defendant filed a motion to strike out the amended petition on the ground that the cause of action therein alleged was a departure from the one attempted to be set up in the original petition. This motion to strike out was sustained. The plaintiff excepted, submitted to judgment, took a bill of exceptions and appealed.
Appellant brought up its abstract with the original petition printed as a part of the record proper and it nowhere appears in the abstract of the bill of exceptions, only the motion to strike out, the courts ruling thereon and the plaintiff's exceptions thereto, and the declination to plead further, appearing in said abstract of the bill of exceptions.
We are, therefore, confronted at the outset with defendant's contention that the original petition is not properly before us, and that as we cannot compare the amended with the original petition, we are in no position to review the propriety or correctness of the trial court's action in ruling that there was a departure.
It has been several times held that where the plaintiff files an amended petition the original becomes an abandoned pleading and, as such, it can no longer be regarded as a part of the record proper; and it can only be brought to the attention of the appellate court *80
by preserving it in the bill of exceptions and showing it in that part of the abstract. [Mugan v. Wheeler,
In the case at bar, the abandoned original petition was not in fact incorporated in the bill of exceptions and, of course, it does not appear in the abstract thereof. It is urged that the case on appeal should be disposed of on the same theory as in the trial court. No doubt that is true as to theory in certain regards; but while it is true that the trial court, in hearing and ruling on the motion to strike out, perhaps did proceed as if it took judicial notice of the original petition, and doubtless the same was not introduced in evidence on the hearing of the motion, yet the rule as to similarity of theory in the appellate as in the trial court does not allow the former to notice things which can only be brought to its notice in a particular way. It is also true that, in the hearing on the motion to strike out, the defendant and not the plaintiff was making the record, and therefore, if it was necessary to introduce the original petition in evidence before the trial court could rule on the motion to strike out the amended petition, it was the defendant's duty to have introduced it; but even if, in that event, the motion was sustained without evidence to support it, that fact does not affirmatively appear in the bill of exceptions, nor was any such point or objection made on that ground. But, even if the abandoned original petition was not, but should have *81 been, formally introduced in evidence in the hearing on the motion, yet that did not prohibit plaintiff from incorporating it in the bill of exceptions as an instrument that had been filed in court, nor did it forbid plaintiff from having it made a part of the bill of exceptions in connection with the plaintiff's exceptions attempted to be saved to the sustaining of the motion.
It is true, in a number of the cases cited above, the abandoned pleading was sought to be made use of as evidence, for example, as an admission and the like; but in at least the first three cases cited above the original petition was sought to be made the same use of as here, namely, to show the situation as to whether there was a departure or not, and yet the ruling was that the abandoned pleading, not being shown in the abstract of the bill of exceptions, could not be considered on appeal. The fact that appellant in those cases failed to save any exception to the trial court's ruling may perhaps have authorized the same result as was reached by the appellate court, but the disposition made of the case was not placed on that ground, but distinctly on the ground that the abandoned pleading could not be considered, not having been properly preserved. Such ruling was, in all of the cases except one, made by a court whose decisions we are required to follow; hence we cannot say the ruling was not necessary to a determination of the case and was, therefore, mere obiter, which we are at liberty to disregard. It is unnecessary to say what our holding would be were we left free to follow our own inclinations and announce the rule for the first time. As we view the above mentioned decisions, we are precluded from considering the original petition.
There being nothing before us in the record enabling us to say the court erred in its ruling, the judgment must be, and is, affirmed. The other judges concur. *82