Court Opinion

ID: 8008307
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-09-09 01:55:28.492063+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:35:56.943813
License: Public Domain

Black, J.
This suit was instituted before a justice-of the peace. Judgment was rendered by default on July 9, 1881. Subsequently, defendant filed a motion to-set aside the judgment, which motion was overruled, and on July 22, the defendant appealed to the-*523circuit court. More than ten days intervened between that appeal and the commencement of the next term of the circuit court, the October term, 1881. On October' 24, 1881, appellee entered his appearance in the circuit court, the appellant having failed to give any notice of the appeal. On the next day appellant moved to dismiss the suit, which motion was overruled and on October 26, the cause was called for hearing and the defendant failing to appear the judgment of the justice was affirmed. The defendant then appealed to this court.
1. The point made here by the appellant, that the* appellee did not enter his appearance on or before the second day of the term of the circuit court, is not well taken, for by law that term commenced on the fourth Monday of October, 1881. The appellee entered his appearance on the twenty-fourth day of the month and hence on the first day of that term.
2. The appellee having thus entered his appearance on or before the second day of the return term, was, according to the plain letter of the statute, entitled to have the cause tried at that term, or continued to the-next term at his election. The majority of the court hold that he could not have the judgment affirmed at that term, it being the first term after the appeal w as-taken, but if he desired to dispose of the case at that term he should have offered evidence and proved up his-case, that he could only have a trial de now, not an affirmance, and the following authorities are relied upon, either as asserting that proposition, or as giving support to it; Berry v. Union Trust Co., 75 Mo. 430 ; Snider v. Railroad Co., 73 Mo. 465; Page v. Railroad Co., 61 Mo. 78 : Blake v. Downey, 51 Mo. 437 ; Nay et al. v. Railroad Co., 51 Mo. 575; Dooley v. Railroad, 83 Mo. 103.
3. I dissent from this exposition of the law and maintain that the cause being ready for trial, and the *524appellant failing to appear, the appellee was entitled to a judgment of affirmance. The statute does, it is true, provide that the cause shall be tried anew in the circuit court, but it also provides that to procure an appeal, the appellant must enter into a recognizance conditioned £ £ that the appellant will prosecute his appeal with due diligence to a decision, and that if, on such appeal, the judgment of the justice be affirmed, or upon a trial anew,” etc., that if the judgment be affirmed, such judgment shall be against the appellant and his sureties. Secs. 3040, 3052, 3062, R. S. Now. prior to the revision of 1879, there was no provision in the act with respect to appeals from justices of the peace, which determined in what cases there might be an affirmance of the judgment, though, as we have seen, such a judgment was recognized in several of its provisions. The new section adopted in 1879 (sec. 3057), is: “If the appellant shall fail to give such notice (the notice of appeal) at least ten days before the second term of the appellate court after the appeal is taken, the judgment shall be affirmed or the appeal dismissed, at the option of the appellee.” This statute but declares what the court had before that time repeatedly held. 50 Mo. 403; 51 Mo. 579 ; 63 Mo. 393; 67 Mo. 628. The difference only is, that by this section, the first term ■or the one which comes 'on first after the appeal, .and by the decisions the first term was the one which came on ten days after the appeal was taken. It seems to be considered this section of 1879 now determines the cases in which alone there can be an affirmance ; this is doubtless due to the fact that section 1,000 has been overlooked. That section provides: “In all •cases where an appeal from a judgment of * * * a justice of the peace shall not be prosecuted by the appellant according to law, the judgment shall be affirmed and the costs adjudged accordingly.” This section, has been a part of the statute law with respect to costs from an early day. It supplied any apparent omission in the *525statute with respect to appeals, and declares there shall be an affirmance in all cases where there is a failure to prosecute -the appeal. The decisions last cited are all based upon the ground that by a continued failure to give the notice there was a failure to prosecute the appeal, and hence an affirmance was proper.
In Martin v. White, 11 Mo. 214, White recovered a judgment against Martin before a justice of the peace. Martin appealed, and when the cause was called he failed to appear, and the judgment of the justice was affirmed. The court then said the right of the appellant to have the cause tried anew must be understood as qualified by this section concerning costs, and he was only entitled toa trial anew when not in default. This case was affirmed in Starr v. Stewart, 18 Mo. 410 ; Milligan v. Dunn, 19 Mo. 643 ; State v. Thevenin, 19 Mo 237. In Nay v. Railroad Co., 51 Mo. 575, the defendant appealed subsequent to the rendition of the judgment of the justice and failed to give any notice. There was no appearance by the plaintiff, appellee, until the eighth day of the return term, and hence the cause did not stand for any action at that term. A judgment of affirmance then entered was held' to be erroneous, but it clearly enough appears that Judge Adams understood the appellee might have a judgment of affirmance at the next term for want of prosecution, should the appellant then fail to appear.
From all this, the conclusion, it seems to me, must be that the appellee is entitled to an affirmance in all cases where there is a failure to prosecute the appeal according to law; that he is entitled to such affirmance where there is a continued failure, on the part of appellant to give the notice, because that constitutes a failure to prosecute the appeal; that, as in the case at bar, where the cause stands for trial and the appellant falls to appear, that also constitutes a failure to prosecute the appeal, and hence the judgment of affirmance *526was correct. So far as this case is concerned I may add that the record shows that when the defendant’s motion to dismiss the snit in the circuit court was overruled it ■expressly declined to appear further than to perfect this .appeal; surely that was not only a failure, but a refusal .to prosecute the appeal.
The judgment is, however, in accordance with the ■opinion of the other members of the court, reversed and the cause remanded for new trial.
Sherwood, J., .absent: