Johnson v. Latta

Ewing, C.

Plaintiff sued defendant before a justice of the peace in Carroll county. Defendant filed his affidavit for a change of venue, which was granted and judgment at the same time entered against the defendant for costs, under section 2956, Eevised Statutes, 1879. The justice afterwards on the 22nd of December, 1880, issued execution on the judgment for costs, returnable ninety days thereafter. On March 16, 1880, the constable made return of nulla bona. On May 15, 1880, a transcript of the justice’s judgment was filed in the office of the clerk of the circuit court of Carroll county. On the 21st of August, 1880, an execution issued from the clerk’s office of Carroll circuit court on the transcript judgment. At the December term following defendant filed his motion to quash this execution for various reasons, which motion was sustained. Afterwards on the 26th of October, 1881, execution again issued on the transcript judgment and was levied on certain lands of the defendant. On *142the 7th day of December, 1881, the defendant filed his motion to quash this execution, setting out as reasons therefor the same reasons alleged in the first motion to quash a former execution issued, as hereinbefore stated, and as additional reason that the questions were res judicata, having been presented in the first motion and adjudicated therein and no appeal taken from the judgment thereon. One of the reasons, common to both motions, was that the execution issuing from the justice was returned too soon, and before the return day thereof. As these two questions will dispose of the case it is useless to look further.

I. Section 2998 provides for filing transcripts of justices’ judgments in the office oí the clerk of the circuit court, and section 2999, Revised Statutes, 1879, provides that no execution shall issue out of the clerk’s office when such transcript shall be filed, until an execution shall have been issued by the justice, if the defendant resides in the county, and returned nulla bona. In Ruby v. Han. & St. Jo. Ry. Co., 39 Mo. 480, it was held that the certificate of the justice of the above facts is prima facie evidence on which the clerk of the circuit court may issue execution, but on motion to quash a party may show any defect or irregularity in the proceeding of the justice or constable. The evidence in the case at bar on the motion seems to be that the justice’s execution was returned before its regular legal return day. And when that appears the execution from the clerk’s office is shown to be improvidently issued and should be quashed. Secs. 2998 and 2999, supra. Judge Scott, in Dillon v. Rash, 27 Mo. 243, says: “Regularly, an execution cannot be returned before the return day.” The defendant may have no property whereon to levy when the execution is returned, but he may acquire it after the return is made.

II. The matters litigated in the first motion to quash were the same as those set up in the second motion, without the exceptions above noted. There was judgment on that motion from which no appeal was prosecuted, and those questions are, therefore, res judicata. Chouteau v. Gibson, 76 Mo. 38.

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*143III. It is insisted by the respondent that as there was no motion for a new trial filed in this case nothing will be considered except what arises on the record proper. In Bruce v. Vogel, 38 Mo. 100, it was held that this court “will review the decisions of inferior courts on motions, although the points of law determined, should not be specifically stated in the bill of exceptions, and no motion for anew trial made.” Parker v. Waugh, 34 Mo. 340; Slagel, adm'r, v. Murdock, 65 Mo. 522.

IV. But as this case, upon reversal, may be further proceeded with, it is meet that we pass upon the question which would, in great measure, control any further disposition of the case. That is the construction of section 2956, Revised Statutes, 1879. The question is, when a ■change of venue is taken from a justice of the peace, and costs are “ taxed ” as provided in that section, whether an execution therefor may be issued by the justice who grants the change, and the-costs collected thereunder by the constable. The section provides that when a change of venue is taken, the party applying therefor “shall be taxed with” certain specified costs. Section 5595, Revised Statutes, 1879, provides that: “The several officers hereinafter named, and jurors and witnesses, shall be allowed such fees, * * * asare hereinafter provided, and the clerks of the courts of reeord, and the presiding officers of courts of inferior jurisdiction, etc., * * * shall thereupon enter the amount thereof upon their fee books, and the said clerk and the other officers before mentioned, shall, after the term of the court at or before which the services were rendered, if required * * * certify a fee bill of such services, and deliver the same to the sheriff, or other officer * * * charged-by law with the service of executions, who shall proceed forthwith to collect the same * *- in the same manner and with0 like effect, as on an execution.” This section is comprehensive and includes fees for services of officers and witnesses in all courts.

The State ex rel. Fulkerson v. Emmerson, 74 Mo. *144607, was a case, where, after appeal granted to the Supreme Court, aud supersedeas bond given, the clerk issued a fee bill for his costs and it was insisted he had no power or legal right to do so. The court held that £ £ if the appellant shall execute a bond as required by the statute it operates as a supersedeas and prevents the issuance of any execution to enforce the judgment appealed from. It does not, therefore, follow, that the right of a person who has rendered services in said cause, authorized to be taxed as costs, to demand the issuance of a fee bill therefor, or the duty of the clerk of the court to issue it when demanded, is in any manner interfered with. This right is conferred and this duty is imposed by section 5595, Revised Statutes. ’ ’ That would seem to be sufficient authority to cover the case at bar, because section 5595 applies especially to “presiding officers of courts of inferior jurisdiction” as well as to clerks of courts of record. But this is-not all. Section 5624, Revised Statutes, 1879, provides that “justices of the peace may issue fee bills” which, if not paid after demand made, as therein provided, the officer “may and shall levy fee bills on the goods and chattels of such person in the same manner and with like effect as on a fieri facias.”

The judgment below is reversed and the case remanded.

All concur.