Whitsett v. Blumenthal

63 Mo. 479 | Mo. | 1876

Sherwood, Judge,

delivered the opinion of the court.

The propriety of the rulings which required the plaintiffs to give security for costs, and the dismissal of their petition for failure to do so, are the only points the record presents. From that it appears that two little girls, the heirs of a handsome patrimony, consisting of the undivided two-thirds of over three hundred acres of land, lying in the counties of Franklin and St. Louis, a large portion being within the present limits of, or adjacent to, the town of Pacific, were despoiled of their heritage by an unwarrantable proceeding in partition. Upon attaining their majority they, together with their husbands, in July, 1869, brought the present' suit to set aside all the partition proceedings, on the ground that the heirs had never appeared or been represented in court. They were successful so far as concerns the vacation of *480the obnoxious proceedings, as an interlocutory decree was entered to that effect, which declared their interest as above stated, and appointed a referee to ascertain the rents, profits, etc., realized from the land, and in consequence of the sale of timber, sand, rock, lime, etc., therefrom, and also the amount of taxes paid by defendants, as well as the amount and nature of the improvements made by them on the property, the sums paid by them for the same, and likewise, what became of the shares of the two heirs now suing, in the money arising from the partition sale. This interlocutory order was made in June, 1870. The referee took an account of all these matters, and made a report June 15th, 1872 ; the plaintiff filed exceptions thereto ; the referee was, on July 13, 1872, allowed a fee of $500, and four days thereafter the referee, through one of the defendants’ attorneys, filed a motion to rule the plaintiffs to give security for costs, alleging that .they were “insolvent and unable to pay the costs accrued and which may accrue in said case.”

On the hearing of this motion the defendants kindly volunteered their services, and showed that plaintiffs possessed no property other than that in controversy, subject to execution. Whereupon, the court, without examination of the report, or passing on the exceptions of the plaintiffs, made an order requiring them to give security for costs by the first day of the next term. This not being done, the cause was, on the 18th day of October, 1872, dismissed, and the plaintiffs are appellants here, having vainly filed a motion to reinstate the cause on the docket.

It cannot be disputed that it is a matter resting greatly in the discretion of the court, whether plaintiff, in a given case, shall be ruled to give security for costs or not, nor that, if such order be made, and is not complied with, the power exists to dismiss the suit on a failure of compliance with the order. But this rule is not, and cannot be, universal in its application. In other words, there is some limit to the exercise of the discretion confided to the trial court in this regard, and such discretion should not be allowed to proceed to extravagant length without rebuke. Under the circumstances of this case, the action of the court would seem indefensible. The theory upon which security for costs *481proceeds is evidently the ultimate liability and the ultimate inability of the party from whom they are required, to pay them. In the case at bar, however, there was neither apparent liability or inability, on the part of plaintiffs, to pay the costs. The interlocutory decree shows this ; shows besides, as before stated, that the heirs were entitled to two-thirds of a valuable estate, equal to two hundred and twenty-two acres of land, together with rents, profits and the sale of sand, lime and timber therefrom, during a long series of years.

The defendants, Blumeñthal and Ault, paid for the tract §5,488.35, September 27th, 1.855, at sheriff’s sale. What it is worth now, since an addition to the town of Pacific has been laid out on the tract, does not appear ; but judging by the figures just mentioned, the interest of the heirs would be worth at least two-thirds of that sum, or §3,658, while the charges brought against them by the referee are but $3,492, all told. Whether these charges should have been allowed at all by the referee, was a matter which could not, by any.possibility be determined by the court until it had examined his report and passed on the plaintiff’s exceptions. If’those exceptions were allowed, this, in all probability, would have resulted in the' extinguishment of the charges made against the plaintiffs. If, on the contrary, those exceptions were overruled, still, as above shown there was an apparently ample fund out of which to satisfy the costs, as before seen, even should it be held that heirs, when successful in such cases, should be mulcted in costs. And these heirs were successful ; they had, by the terms of the interlocutory decree, wrested their property from the grasp of those who without authority had seized it, and there only remained the entry of the final decree to accomplish the full fruition of their hopes, by placing them again in possession of their own. And the statute is expressed that the party prevailing shall recover costs. (Wagn. Stat. 343, § 6.)

Taking all these matters into consideration, we do not regard the action of the lower court as the exercise of a sound or judicial discretion. The case is one which speaks to the ear of a *482court of equity with a peculiarly persuasive tongue. Infants, whose very helplessness ever invokes the special cognizance and protection of a court of chancery, are, under the forms of law, robbed of their inheritance, and when, after years of litigation, they finally succeed in obtaining a declaratory and decretal recognitiqn of their claims, their success is but transitory ; for soon they are blandly informed that, though in the possession of undoubted, and recognized rights, yet that recognition is bare and meaningless, unless they can in their poverty, a poverty occasioned by the very acts which the interlocutory decree sets aside, assume an obligation for the payment of costs — costs which would have never existed but for the grasping greed of their numerous adversaries.

The judgment is reversed, and the cause remanded.

Judges Napton and Hough concur ; Judge Wagner absent.
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