JOHN EDWARD TOOKER, ERMA PEASE and EMMA TOOKER ANTONE v. MISSOURI POWER & LIGHT COMPANY, a Corporation, Appellants.
Supreme Court of Missouri, Division Two
March 5, 1935.
336 Mo. 592 | 80 S. W. (2d) 691
COOLEY, C.—Action in ejectment for possession of a strip of land described as fifteen acres off the north side of the north half of the southeast quarter of Section 3, Township 57, Range 20, in Linn County, and for damages caused by defendant by its alleged wrongful entry, by cutting down trees and by erecting poles and wires for the transmission of electricity. The alleged wrongful entry and other acts complained of are alleged in the petition to have been done on or about the — day of November, 1930. The strip of land in question is bounded on the north by a public highway and it appears that defendant‘s transmission line follows the highway, but
The defense was that defendant had acquired a right-of-way upon the land for the purpose of maintaining thereon its transmission line and had paid the damages for the appropriation thereof by payment of a judgment obtained against it by these plaintiffs in a former action. The case was tried to the court without a jury, resulting in a judgment for plaintiffs for possession and one dollar damages. The effect of the judgment is to deny defendant‘s claim of ownership of an easement or right of way. The appeal was granted to the Kansas City Court of Appeals, which court transferred the case to this court on the ground that title to real estate is involved, giving this court appellate jurisdiction. We think the case was properly transferred. See Novinger v. Shoop, 185 Mo. App. 526, 172 S. W. 616, transferred by Court of Appeals and jurisdiction taken here, Novinger v. Shoop (Mo.), 201 S. W. 64.
I. We are first confronted with a motion filed by respondent to dismiss the appeal for failure of appellant to give an appeal bond conditioned as provided by
It appears from a certified copy of the appeal bond herein, filed with respondent‘s motion, that such bond was conditioned only as provided by
We do not so interpret the statute in question. It is the policy of the law, as evidenced by statutory provisions on the subject, to allow appeals from final judgments to the end that the losing party may have a review of alleged errors committed to his prejudice by the trial court. It is evidently the legislative belief that the ends of justice are thus best subserved. The right of appeal is statutory, but, no doubt having in mind this salutary legislative purpose, this court said in Stid v. Mo. Pac. Ry. Co., 211 Mo. 411, 418, 109 S. W. 663, that “an appeal being the creature of the statute, the object to be subserved being to get at the very right of the cause, statutes pertaining to procedure are entitled to a liberal construction and courts should not be prone to plant thorns in the path of appeal.” That was said in holding that a judgment might be treated as final for the purpose of an appeal, though a motion in arrest of judgment had not been passed upon. In Hurley v. Universal Clay Co., 278 Mo. 408, 415, 213 S. W. 28, it is said that the right to an appeal, though purely statutory, is remedial and therefore to be liberally construed, citing the Stid case. [See, also, O‘Malley v. Cont. L. Ins. Co., 335 Mo. 1115, 75 S. W. (2d) 837, 839.] In construing statutes the courts seek to arrive at and enforce the intention of the Legislature. “In construing statutory provisions the object and purpose which induce their enactment and the mischief they are intended to prevent must be given effect (Spitler v. Young, 63 Mo. 42), as must also the results and consequences of a proposed interpretation.” (Citing cases.) [Straughan v. Meyers, 268 Mo. 580, 187 S. W. 1159, 1163.]
In Bowers v. Missouri Mut. Assn., 333 Mo. 492, 505, 62 S. W. (2d) 1058, 1063, we said that, “In arriving at the legislative intent doubtful words of a statute may be enlarged or restricted in their meaning to conform to the intent of the lawmakers, when manifested by the aid of sound principles of interpretation” (citing cases), and, quoting from State ex rel. Asotsky v. Regan, 317 Mo. 1216, 298 S. W. 747, 749, “while we have no right to construe a law by our view of its expediency, we can take that feature into consideration in attempting to ascertain what was in the legislative mind.”
The statute in question is not very clearly worded. It appears intended to apply only to the losing defendant in an ejectment suit who is in possession. That leaves the plaintiff, if he loses, free to seek review of the cause on the merits by appeal, under the general code, as in any other case. If the statute was intended to deny to the losing defendant a similar right of review, why the discrimination against him and in favor of the plaintiff? Under the general Code,
We have been unable to find any decision construing
The “docket fee” referred to goes to the clerk of the appellate court. Notwithstanding the seemingly mandatory form of the language of
For the reasons indicated we overrule the motion to dismiss the appeal and consider the appeal on its merits.
II. It is admitted that plaintiffs were the owners, as tenants in common, of the strip of land in question when the acts complained of were done. About November, 1930, the defendant erected a transmission line, setting some of its poles, as above stated, inside plaintiff‘s fence and upon their said premises. In so doing defendant cut a few trees and cleared out brush, etc., on plaintiffs’ land in order to clear the space occupied by its line. After this work had been done and the transmission line erected the plaintiffs herein brought a suit for damages against defendant in the Circuit Court of Linn County, returnable to the December Term, 1931, of the court. The petition therein was in two counts. The first count alleged in substance that the defendant, on or about the — day of November, 1930, unlawfully and without right entered upon plaintiffs’ said land and cut certain trees, destroyed grass and plants, a part of the realty, and dug up earth, all to plaintiffs’ damage in the sum of $535, and that said acts were done in violation of the treble-damage statute,
In its answer to plaintiffs’ petition in said first suit the defendant, after a general denial, pleaded that before entering upon the land it had procured a right of way for the erection thereon of its line from one Demarest, who had been placed in possession by plaintiffs un-
We think plaintiffs are precluded by their prior suit and recovery from maintaining this action. Respondents have filed no brief herein but by their pleading in both suits they seem to concede, as defendant contends, that defendant is an electrical corporation within the meaning of
In the first case the plaintiffs, evidently, did not recover all the damages to which they were entitled. It appears that they recovered for the damage to the market value of their lands caused by the cutting of trees, because the court, at their request, instructed the jury, on the measure of damages, to consider “the difference in the reasonable market value of said land immediately before and immediately after the cutting of said trees occasioned solely by the cutting and destruction of said trees.” By the dismissal of their second count—their voluntary act—they withdrew from the case the question of damage resulting from the erection and maintenance of a high voltage electrical transmission line across their lands. Did they and could they thus escape the legal effect of their election to sue for damages rather than in ejectment? We think not.
Plaintiffs sued for damages instead of suing in ejectment. They pursued that remedy to final judgment, which they collected. By so doing we think they elected to treat defendant‘s appropriation of the right-of-way as a permanent and accomplished thing. Conceding that on the record herein they did not recover all the damages to which they were entitled their failure to do so was their own fault. They could have recovered in their first action all the
In our opinion the propriety of the conclusion above stated is not affected by the fact that plaintiffs may have thought—mistakenly as the event proved—that they had an action for treble damages for the cutting of trees and destruction of grass and plants. We see no reason why they could not properly have sued, as they originally did, in one count for such treble damages and in another count for single damages growing out of the same acts of defendant,—the same transaction, all of which damages had accrued when the first suit was brought. In other words they might have retained and litigated in the first suit the claim for damages asserted in the second count of their petition in that suit. This holding finds support in Hunter Land and Development Co. v. Caruthersville Stave & Heading Co. (Mo. App.), 9 S. W. (2d) 531. We think the judgment of the circuit court is for the wrong party and cannot be sustained. It is reversed. Westhues and Bohling, CC., concur.
PER CURIAM:—The foregoing opinion by COOLEY, C., is adopted as the opinion of the court. All the judges concur.
THE STATE v. MAJOR DUNCAN, Appellant.—80 S. W. (2d) 147.
Division Two, March 5, 1935.
