Macey v. Carter

Gill, J.

*493STATEMENT. *492This case is here on a second appeal of the defendants. Its general nature is set out in our *493former opinion, 67 Mo. App. 323. As will be seen, Mrs. Maey sued Carter, a road overseer, and others for wrongfully entering upon her land tearing down and destroying her fences, etc., with the avowed purpose of opening a road through her (Mrs. Macy’s) farm. At the first trial the plaintiff had a verdict for $100, which under the trespass statute, section 8676, Revised Statutes 1889, was doubled, awarding plaintiff a judgment for $200. We reversed the former judgment and remanded the case for a new trial because of the court’s error in permitting plaintiff to prove certain special damages-to wit, to her meadow land - when the petition contained no allegation in relation to such special damage.

At the second trial below, the petition was amended so as to cure the defect and upon practically the same evidence as before, plaintiff had a verdict for $25 only, and from a judgment thereon fot $50 with the statury penalty of $5 defendants have again appealed.

After a careful examination of the record and a consideration of the several objection urged, we conclude that no reversible error was committed and will therefore affirm the judgment.

*494nation: petition «'court- juris” áction:trespass, *493Notwithstanding the wide range counsel have taken in their briefs, there were but two substantial questions in the case-were defendants guilty of a trespass and if so what ought plaintiff to recover? It must be conceded that defendant Carter and his associates entered upon plaintiff's land, tore down her fences and thereby destroyed some fencing material and for a time reddered her eighty acre pasture unfit for use. Defendants sought to justify the act by an alleged order from township commissioners, commanding said road overseer to open a new road across plaintiff's farm. Preparatory to the introduction of said order in evidence, defendants offered certain papers and records of the *494Grundy county court to show that said county had adopted township organization. Two papers, denominated “petitions to re-submit township organization,” were offered in evidence, and these w6re followed by an order of the county court dated August 19, 1882, as follows: being a petition filed signed by over one hundred taxpayers praying the court to resubmit the question of township organization to the qualified voters of Grundy county to be voted upon at the next general election, etc., * * * which said petition was examined by the court and found to contain the number of taxpayers required by law. It was therefore ordered,” etc. This order of the county court was void since it was- not based on the requirements of the statute. Section 7430, Revised Statutes 1879, under which the order was made, provides, that “the county court on petition of one hundred legal voters of said county, shall causé to be submitted to the voters of the county the question of township organization,” etc. The recitals in the order above quoted show only that the county court found that the election was petitioned for by one hundred taxpayers of the county — not legal voters as the statute required. For aught that appears the petition for election may have been signed wholly, or in part, by women, minors or nonresident property owners; they would be taxpayers but not “legal or qualified voters of said county.” The requisite qualification of these petitioners was in the nature of a jurisdictional fact to be determined by the county court before an election could be ordered. The county court had no jurisdiction to proceed until a petition signed by at least one hundred legal voters of the county was presented and the record of that court should have affirmatively shown that the petitioners possessed the necessary qualifications — otherwise the proceeding *495was a nullity. Fisher v. Davis, 27 Mo. App. 321, and cases cited.

The defect in the proceedings by the county court is, of .itself, sufficient to destroy the entire fabric of township organization as was then pretended in Grundy county and render nugatory the whole proceeding looking to the opening of the road in question. • Other objections to the proceedings need not then be considered.

This disposes then of the main question in this case. This settles the status of defendants when they went onto plaintiff’s farm and by tearing away the fences attempted to open a road without her consent. They were all trespassers and subject to the provisions of section 8676 of our trespass statute, and that too even though the defendants thought they had legal right to proceed. Rousey v. Wood, 57 Mo. App. 651. This then clearly settled plaintiff’s right of recovery, and the trial court properly instructed the jury to find for plaintiff.

Ture o1sdim”|es! fofmuotf10jIudg The measure of damages, or proper amount of recovery, is the only remaining question deserving notice. Although the instructions as to measure of damages were in some apparent confusion — largely owing to instructions asked by defendants — yet the jury were fairly well advised to-fix by their verdict the actual damages sustained by the plaintiff “for the throwing down and removal of her fences, damages thereto, and for the loss of the use of her pasture lands on said premises.” And under this the jury rendered the following verdict: “We, the jury, find for plaintiff and assess her damage at the sum of $25.” Thereupon the court, on plaintiff’s motion, doubled this verdict and entered'judgment for $50, adding thereto $5, the statutory penalty. There was no error in entering this *496judgment doubling the actual damages found by the jury and adding the $5 statutory penalty; it is the identical judgment required by the statute, section 8676, Revised Statutes 1889; Rousey v. Wood, supra. But even if we should concede that the court, in matter of damages, gave inconsistent, or even erroneous instructions, the judgment, in face of the facts clearly shown, ought not to be disturbed. The evidence overwhelmingly shows that plaintiff suffered in excess of the verdict she received, and the defendants have no cause whatever to complain of the amount she recovers in this action.

Several other objections are made in the brief of defendants’ counsel, but we deem it unnecessary to discuss them here. We have gone over these several technical matters in detail and discover nothing of any substantial prejudice to defendants. The judgment is manifestly for the right party and will be affirmed.

All concur.