Richmond's Adm'x v. Wardlaw

Decision Date31 October 1865
PartiesRICHMOND'S ADM'X, Respondent, v. WARDLAW & POGUE, Appellants.
CourtMissouri Supreme Court

Appeal from Hannibal Court of Common Pleas

W. P. Harrison & E. B. Ewing, for respondent.

S. S. Allen and Crane, for appellant.

WAGNER, Judge, delivered the opinion of the court.

The record in this case shows that the judgment was rendered in the Court of Common Pleas on the 9th day of December, 1863, and the motion for a new trial was not filed till the 16th day of the same month. The statute (R. C. p. 1286, § 6,) provides that “all motions for new trials, and in arrest of judgment, shall be made within four days after the trial, if the term so long continues; and if not, then before the end of the term.”

In Williams v. Circuit Court (5 Mo. 524), the Supreme Court says: “The sum of the whole matter under our laws, then, seems to be this; a party sleeps on his rights until the time allowed him by law to make his motion for a new trial expires; he can no longer claim to make his motion as a matter of right, but he may afterwards suggest to the court that substantial justice has not been done him, and the court may look into the matter or not. If they refuse to grant the party a new trial, no error will lie, because no law authorized him to make the motion after the four days expired; and this is a proper punishment for neglecting to assert his rights in due time.” (5 Mo. 328; 8 Id. 686.)

The appellants having no authority for making the motion at the time, cannot be heard in alleging anything against the decision of the court in overruling it.

The other judges concurring, the judgment is affirmed.Crane, for plaintiff in error, filed a motion for re-hearing, which was overruled.

Motion for re-hearing by Appellants.

The appellants now move the court to grant a re-hearing in this case, and for that purpose submit the following:

The court, in deciding the case, have confounded the practice of 1849 with the old system, which is now not in use. To the case of Williams v. The Circuit Court (5 Mo. 254) belongs the credit of suggesting the practice that under the old system gradually grew up, by which motions for new trials were made essential to preserve for review the errors of the court below. But that case was, after all, the expression of one judge only; and has not been treated as of much weight beyond the parties themselves. The case was decided in 1838; and afterwards in 1841, in Benoist v. Powell (7 Mo. 224), the same doctrine was fully endorsed, and it was held that though the record shows that a new trial was asked and reasons therefor assigned, yet the appellant was not entitled to a review of the errors below, because the motion for a new trial was not preserved n the bill of exceptions. So again in 1845, in Higgins v. Brun (9 Mo, 497), the court said that the rule was reasonable and settled, and tha when there is a judgment on a verdict, and no motion is made to set i aside and grant a new trial, this court will not disturb the judgment, (p 501, 502.) But this was the voice of two judges only, and Napton, J dissented. Then, in 1847, the case of Floersch v. The Bank (10 Mo. 516 came up, and decided that such errors only as were excepted to in the motion for a new trial would be reviewed by this court, and that erro not made the ground of objection in the motion for a new trial would not be reviewed. Here, also, Napton, J., dissented. In Watson v. Pierc (11 Mo. 348), decided in 1848, the whole court seem to concur, that unless the bill of exceptions contains a motion for a new trial, this court will not disturb a judgment rendered upon a verdict. The same point was again decided in Rhodes v. White (11 Mo. 623), and the court say, “It has been repeatedly decided by this court that a motion for a new trial must be made, thereby affording the Circuit Court an opportunity, if an error has been committed by that court in the course of the trial, upon a more mature consideration, to correct the same by granting the party complaining a new trial.”

This was the law of practice in the Supreme Court of Missouri until 1849, at which time it was overthrown, and a new and opposite rule has constantly prevailed until the decision of the case at bar has, if permitted to stand, effectually restored the old practice. And it may be safely asserted that the code of 1849, whose prevailing spirit has been said to decide all questions of law and fact without slavish adherence to forms, becomes ineffectual, if the errors which are made below, and preserved of record, cannot be reviewed without they are once more brought to the notice of this court; and not only brought to its notice, but brought by a motion for a new trial, and brought to its notice again for a new trial, filed within four days after the trial of the case. The statute itself, where it refers to motions for new trials, is mandatory on courts and directed against them, and not against parties. If the motion is made, the law says the court shall do so and so; but it does not say that unless the party makes such a motion, he shall be precluded from having the errors below (otherwise properly preserved) reviewed in the appellate court.

It is a mistaken view of the law to suppose that a motion for a new trial is necessary at all under the practice of 1849 (33 Mo. 238, 243), or that a party who has made such a motion is concluded by its terms from afterwards objecting to the action of the court below,...

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24 cases
  • Mirrielees v. Wabash Railroad Company
    • United States
    • Missouri Supreme Court
    • June 12, 1901
    ...trial. Judge McGirk held that if the motion was filed in time, the reasons or grounds therefor might be filed afterwards. In Richmond's Admx. v. Wardlaw, 36 Mo. 313, the case Williams v. Court, supra, was cited and followed, by refusing to review the action of the trial court in refusing to......
  • City of St. Louis v. Senter Com'n Co.
    • United States
    • Missouri Supreme Court
    • February 19, 1937
    ...own error, and unless such motion is filed at the appropriate time, the cause will not be reviewed in the appellate tribunal -- Richmond v. Pogue, 36 Mo. 313; State v. Marshall, 36 Mo. 400; Banks v. Lades, Mo. 406." Again in Case v. Fogg, 46 Mo. 44, l. c. 47: ". . . and those errors only ca......
  • Merrielees v. Wabash R. Co.
    • United States
    • Missouri Supreme Court
    • May 14, 1901
    ...Judge McGirk held that, if the motion was filed in time, the reasons or grounds therefor might be filed afterwards. In Richmond's Adm'x v. Wardlaw, 36 Mo. 313, the case of Williams v. Circuit Court, supra, was cited and followed, by refusing to review the action of the trial court in refusi......
  • State ex rel. Brainerd v. Adams
    • United States
    • Missouri Supreme Court
    • October 31, 1884
    ...of the court below. (6) The court has power to order a new trial on its own motion. Williams v. Circuit Court, 5 Mo. 248; Richmond v. Wardlaw, 36 Mo. 313; Simpson v. Blunt, 42 Mo. 542; Mills v. Scott, 99 U. S. 25; Ex parte Henry, 24 Ala. 648; 3 Black. Com. 389; Gould v. Tatum, 21 Ark. 330, ......
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