This is a petition at the relation of the Laclede Bank, for a prohibition against the St. Louis court of appeals to prohibit said court from issuing its peremptory mandamus against W. H. Horner, judge of the St. Louis circuit court, compelling him, as such judge, to enter judgment upon a verdict rendered in a certain cause pending before him, wherein C. H. Albers and others are plaintiffs, and the banking house of Bartholow, Lewis & Co.— now the Laclede Bank—and the relator in this petition, is defendant, notwithstanding the fact that said judge, on the motion of the defendant, had, in effect, by its conditional order, set aside said verdict, and granted a new trial in said cause.
The “mandamus proceeding ” out of which this application has grown, is entitled “State of Missouri ex rel. C. H. Albers et al. v. W. H. Horner, Judge, respondent,” and is reported in 10 Mo. App. 307, 315. It appears from that case, as well as from the petition and the accompanying transcript, that a prior verdict in said cause had been set aside, and a former new trial granted on the motion of the same defendant, and that said mandamus was awarded by said court of appeals on the relation of said Albers and others, upon the ground that said second new trial was an act beyond the power of said circuit court, and in violation of the provisions of section 3705 of the Revision of 1879, which declares that, “Only one new trial shall be allowed to either party, except, 1st, When the triers of the fact shall have erred in a matter of law; 2nd, When the jury shall be guilty of misbehavior.”
The ground of this application is, that said court of appeals, in violation of the provisions of section 3713 of the Revision of 1879, is about to issue its peremptory mandamus against said circuit court, notwithstanding the fact *375that the judge thereof had appealed from its final judgment awarding said mandamus-, and given the bond required by said section for the purpose of staying said proceedings until said appeal could be heard in this court. The petition alleges that, by force of said statute, the granting of said appeal and the approval of said bond operate a:supersedeas and stay all further proceedings in the matter pending said appeal; that said court of appeals thereafter had no further jurisdiction of said cause, and no power to order said mandamus, and that its subsequent action to that effect would be an act against the constitution and laws of the State, clearly beyond its authority, as well as prejudicial to the interest of the relator—who is the defendant in said verdict and in said contemplated judgment, so about to. be coerced, and who has no other adequate remedy in the premises. On the other hand, it is claimed for the respondent, that the “ peremptory writ of mandamus ” is not an “ execution upon a judgment,” within the meaning of section 3713 of our statute ; that, by reason of the peculiar nature and purpose of said writ, its operation is not stayed by appeal or writ of error, with the statutory bond as in other cases; that such a rule would be repugnant to its very nature, destructive of its efficacy, and violate the statutory command that “ a peremptory writ of mandamus shall be granted without delay, for him, for whom judgment shall be given.”
From this statement it will be readily seen that the only question for our consideration upon this application is the construction of section 3713 of our statute concerning appeals and the stay of execution thereunder; or, in other words, whether there is anything, either in the language of the statute itself or in the nature and purpose of the peremptory writ of mandamus, as now regulated and administered in the judicial system of this country, which exempts it from the operation of supersedeas, incident to all other forms of process, upon all other judgments, in *376case of appeal or writ of error, with the statutory bond iu question.
It may be remarked in the first place, that in this proceeding no question can arise as to the propriety of the ruling of the circuit court on the motion for a new trial; or that of the court of appeals in awarding said mandamus, as it is a fundamental principle that the writ of prohibition is never allowed to usurp the functions of an appeal, writ of error or certiorari. High on Extr. Leg. Rem., §§ 771, 772.
The only question now before us is the power of the court of appeals to order the mandamus, notwithstanding the appeal and approval of the bond in question. If the plain language of the statute is to control, it seems to us that the ■ court of appeals, after the granting of said appeal, and the approval of said bond, had no further jurisdiction of the cause, and no power whatever to order the issuance of said writ. Section 3713 provides that, “ upon appeal being made, the court from which an appeal is prayed, shall make an order allowing the appeal, and such allowance thereof, shall stay the execution in the following cases and no other: * * 2nd, When the appellant, or some responsible person for him, together with two sufficient securities, to be approved by the court, shall, during the term at which the judgment appealed from was rendered, enter into a recognizance to the adverse party, in a penalty double the amount of whatever debt, damages and costs, or damages and costs, have been recovered by such judgment, together with the interest that may accrue thereon, and the costs and damages that may be recovered in any appellate court, upon the appeal, conditioned, that the appellant will prosecute his appeal with due diligence to a decision, in the appellate court, and shall perform.such judgment as may be given by such court, or such as the said court may direct the circuit court or St. Louis court of appeals to give, and if the judgment of such court, or any part thereof, be affirmed, that he will comply with and *377perform the same, so far as it may be affirmed, and will pay all damages and costs which may be awarded against the appellant by any appellate court.” By section 3714 : “Any judge of the Supreme Court, or St. Louis court of appeals, respectively, in cases appealable to said courts, upon inspection of a copy of the record, may grant an appeal, by special order for that purpose, at any time within one year next after the rendition of the final judgment or decision in the cause.” Section 3713, among other things, provides that, “ an appeal granted by the Supreme Court, ■or St. Louis court of appeals, or any judge thereof, * * shall not operate as a stay of proceedings unless a like recognizance, as in case of other appeals in civil cases, be entered into before the Supreme Court, St. Louis court of appeals, or a judge or clerk thereof, and filed in the office of the clerk of the circuit court in which the judgment appealed from was rendered.” Section 3718, declares, that, “on filing such recognizance, there shall be a stay of all further proceedings upon the judgment appealed from, except that perishable property may be sold if the circuit court or judge thereof shall deem the same necessary and proper, and not injurious to the appellant, and if sold, the proceeds thereof shall be retained subject to the order of the court.” Section 3710 provides that “every person aggrieved by any final judgment or decision of any circuit court, in any civil action, or by any such judgment or decision of the St. Louis court of appeals from which an appeal is not prohibited by the constitution, may make his appeal to the court having appellate jurisdiction of such judgment or decision.” Section 3712, prescribes the conditions as to time, and affidavit, upon which appeals may be taken and allowed. Subject to these conditions, and the limitation contained in section 3710, appeals, by. the express words of the statute (§ 3710), are allowable, from any final judgment or decision of said courts, in any civil cause, whatever that judgment or decision may be. This proposition is not denied. Indeed, *378the right of the respondent, in the mandamus proceeding in question, is expressly conceded. State v. Horner, 10 Mo. App. 315; Ex parte Skaggs, 19 Mo. 339; Mo. Const., art. 6, § 12.
But it is insisted that a peremptory writ of mandamus is not an “ execution ” upon a judgment, within the meaning of the statute, (§ 3713,) and in support of this proposition, reference is had to the penalty of the recognizance provided for in section 3713; and also to the definition of the term “ execution ” as found in sections 2335, 2336, regulating that form of process known as a fieri fiadas. 10 Mo. App. 378.
Erom a careful examination of the several-provisions of the statutes; we think.it quite clear that the term “ execution,” in section 3713, and the term “ proceedings,” in sections 3717, 3718, are used interchangeably, and mean one and the same thing, and that is, that the execution or performance of the judgment or decision appealed from, whatever it may be, is stayed by the allowance of said appeal, and the approval of said recognizance in the penalty and conditioned, as required by section 3713. In other words, the process appropriate and necessary for carrying into effect the judgment or decision appealed from, whatever it may be, is superseded by the appeal and recognizance in question.
The form and nature of that process, necessarily depends upon the form and nature of the judgment or decision appealed from. In any event, whatever may be its form, name or purpose, it is equally stayed by force of the statute in question. In this construction we are supported, if support be necessary, by the condition of the recognizance itself, the language of which is, “ that the appellant will prosecute his appeal with due diligence to a decision in the appellate court, and shall perform such judgment as shall be given by such court, or such as said court may direct the circuit court, or the St. Louis court of appeals, to give, and if the judgment of such court, or any part *379thereof, be affirmed, that he will comply with and perform the same, so far as it may be affirmed.” This language of the recognizance, we think, clearly interprets the sense in which the term “ execution ” is used in the statute before us. It plainly and manifestly is not limited to a fieri facias only, but extends to and includes the performance or exe-. cution of whatever judgment the appellate court may give, or direct to be given, and if the original judgment be affirmed, to a compliance with and performance of the same, whatever it may be or require.
Such, we think, is the plain import of the language of the statute. In this language we fail to discover anything favoring the exemption of the writ of mandamus from the operation of the rule incident to all other forms of process adapted and designed to carry out and execute the final judgments and decrees of all courts, from whose decisions appeals are allowed, with the statutory bond in question.
Neither have we been able to find anything in the nature, offices or purposes of the writ itself, as now used and regulated in the judicial system of this country, to justify the exemption claimed.
In England it is true, that mandamus was originally a mere mandate issuing directly from the Sovereign to the subject, to compel the performance of the royal will. In its origin, also, it was in no sense a judicial writ, but a royal mandate, used by the King in superintending the police and in preserving the peace of the realm; and as such it brooked no question. In process of time, however, and in the progress of the continental struggle between the parliament and Crown aided by some legislative amendments, the arbitrary use of this royal mandate, of mere police regulation, fell into disuse, and gave place to the judicial writ of 'mandamus, by which the court of King’s Bench, at an early day, assumed the right to correct and remedy official inaction, and set in motion inferior courts, tribunals and officers. The modern writ of mandamus is *380■defined by a modern text writer, of acknowledged ability, to be “ a command, issuing from a common law court of •competent jurisdiction, in the name of the State or Sovereign, directed to some corporation, officer or inferior ■court, requiring the performance of a particular duty, therein specified, which duty results from the official station of the party to whom the writ is directed, or from ■operation of law.” High’s Extr. Leg. Rem., p. 4.
The extraordinary aid of a mandamus may be invoked either for the purpose of enforcing or protecting a private right, unconnected with the public interest, or for a purely public right, where the people at large are the real party in interest. In modern practice, however, it is more frequently called into requisition for the former purpose than the latter. In this connection, High, in his treatise on mandamus, section 430, uses this language : “ The remedy by mandamus, as discussed and illustrated in the preceding chapters, has been shown to be substantially a civil remedy in its nature, and one which is applied for the protection of purely civil rights. The proceedings, however, are usually instituted in the name of the State or Sovereign, upon the relation or information of the party aggrieved.”
It is difficult to perceive any satisfactory reason why the proceedings should not be conducted, as in ordinary civil actions for the protection of private rights, merely m the name of the actual parties in interest, as plaintiff and defendant, as is done in some of the states, without introducing the State or Sovereign power as prosecutor. This method, however, of instituting the proceedings is of very ancient origin, and seems to have had its foundation in the theory which formerly prevailed, regarding the writ of mandamus as purely a prerogative writ, issuable, not of right, but only at the pleasure of the Sovereign, and hence, issued only in his own name, and as an attribute of his Sovereignty. And while the tendency of the courts in modern times is to disregard the prerogative theory of the writ, and to treat it as an ordinary writ of right, issuable *381as of course, upon proper cause shown, many of the courts, still adhere to the former theory, so far at least as to consider the proceedings properly instituted only in the name-of the state. * * The tendency of the courts, however, is to regard the use of the name of the Sovereign power, as prosecutor, to be merely nominal, the remedy being regarded as essentially a civil remedy. In other words, it is now regarded as in the nature of an action by the-person in whose favor the writ is granted, for the enforcement of a right in cases where the law affords him no other adequate means of redress. Whilst this is so, it may be-remarked, however, that in England, long after the process had thus become an acknowledged judicial writ, it nevertheless continued to be considered and treated, in some-sense, as a prerogative writ. In the earlier English cases, it is uniformly referred to as such. Even Blackstone, in his day, terms it “ a high prerogative writ, of a most extensive remedial character, and one of the flowers of the. King’s Bench.” At an early day, in this country, also, a. few instances are found where courts speak of it in somewhat similar terms. In this connection, High, in his treatise, section 3, page 6, uses this further language: “ In this country, however, a 'mandamus cannot, in any strict, sense, be termed a prerogative writ, and much confusion of ideas has resulted from the efforts of many of the courts, to attach prerogative features to the remedy, as used in th'e; United States. This confusion has resulted chiefly from a. failure to properly discriminate between the English and American systems. Under the English constitution, the-King is the fountain and source of justice. In the United States, from the nature of our system of government, the; writ has necessarily been stripped of its prerogative features.”
Erom this review it would seem a little strange if the-current of American authorities should be found to warrant the idea that there was still something in the nature- and purposes of the writ of mandamus to exempt it from *382tlie operation of the rule applicable to all other process, upon all other final judgments and decrees. More especially are we of this opinion, when we consider the great variety and importance of cases, rights and interests, which are daily adjudicated and settled by proceedings in mandamus, in the numerous courts of the country. Such, we are persuaded, is not the fact. It is true, as appears from the elaborate opinion of the court of appeals, that in some two or three of the states, including South Carolina, New York and perhaps New Jersey, a solitary case may be found, in each of them, where the exemption claimed for mandarhus is directly decided and approved. These cases, however, are based chiefly, if not exclusively, upon the authority of the early English cases cited by the court of appeals.
The able judge who delivered the opinion of the court of appeals, after treating at length of the origin, nature and purpose of the peremptory writ of ■mandamus, by way of summary concludes his remarks on this point in the following language : “ The general rule that no supersedeas can be recognized upon the award of a peremptory mandamus, is maintained in the following cases: Pinckney v. Henegan, 2 Strobh. 250; Rex v. Dean, 1 Stra. 536; Strode v. Palmer, Lil. Mod. Ent. 248; People v. Steele, 1 Edm. Sec. Cas. 505; Dean v. Dowgatt, 1 P. Wms. 348. We find no authoritative decisions to the contrary.” Our attention has been called to a number of American cases of the highest respectability, where the contrary doctrine has beeli expressly decided. These cases possibly may have escaped the learned judge, but in any event we deem them quite as authoritative as any of the cases cited in said opinion. In the case of the State ex rel. Rice v. County Judges, 7 Clark 187, the Iowa court, under a statute similar to ours, and where the point was expressly made, holds the doctrine that “ after judgment ordering a peremptory writ of mandamus, an appeal, with a bond as provided by law, will stay the proceedings as in other cases.” In the case of Mem*383phis v. Brown, 94 U. S. 715, where there was a final judgment awarding a peremptory mandamus, it was held by the Supreme court of the United States, that a writ of error, with the required bond, was a supersedeas. In the case of United States v. Columbian Ins. Co., 2 Cranch C. C. 266, it was decided that, “A writ of error, to the judgment of the circuit court of the District of Columbia, awarding a peremptory mandamus is a supersedeas, and if the peremptory mandamus be issued, after the filing of the writ of error, and within ten days after the rendition of the judgment, it will be quashed.” This case involved the construction of a Virginia statute similar to ours, as well as an elaborate review of all the English authorities cited and relied on in 10 Mo. App., supra. In the case of the People ex rel. Thomas v. The Commissioners of Highways of Milton, 25 How. Pr. 257, the supreme court of New York also decided that “when an appeal to the court of appeals has been brought by the defendant from a judgment awarding a peremptory writ of mandamus, the perfecting of appeal by complying with section 334 of the Code, stays all further proceedings in the court below.” There is also the English case of Reeding v. Newell, 2 Strange 983, which is subsequent to the English authorities cited in 10 Mo. App., supra, where it is held in a mandamus ease that error was a supersedeas to a peremptory mandamus. In addition to all this, our own court, in the case of State ex rel. v. Co. Ct. of Bates Co., 57 Mo. 72, expressly recognizes the doctrine that an appeal, with the statutory bond, from a judgment awarding a peremptory mandamus operates as a supersedeas. It is true, that there was no argument on this point, but the court assume, without question, that such is the law. We think the court was right. In the case of Hudson v. Smith, 9 Wis. 122, the court declares that “ it is the general policy of the law to allow a party against whom judicial proceedings are commenced, to stay proceedings under the decision of an inferior tribunal against him, from which he has appealed, on giving just and adequate secur*384ity,” and that “ in the absence of positive provisions of the statute to the contrary, an appeal perfected as the law requires, does, proprio vigore, stay proceedings under the order appealed from.” There is absolutely, scarcely any limit to the number of authorities in all the states where this general doctrine is not held and approved, as an unquestioned maxim of the law.
In view, therefore, of the premises, we feel constrained to hold, both on principle and authority, as well as the plain letter of the statute, that the court of appeals, after granting said appeal and approving said bond, had no power to order the issuance of the peremptory mandamus awarded.
The prohibition asked for must, therefore, be ordered,, and go accordingly.
All concur.