Summary
In State ex rel. City of St. Louis v. Priest, 348 Mo. 37, 152 S.W.2d 109 (1941), suit was brought against a circuit court clerk for failure to issue executions on judgments obtained by the city.
Summary of this case from Grant v. FletcherOpinion
June 12, 1941.
1. TRIAL: Directed Verdict. In directing a verdict for the defendants the court must consider as true the evidence favorable to the plaintiff, disregarding that evidence which is favorable to the defendants where any conflict exists, and must draw from the evidence all reasonable inferences of fact favorable to the plaintiff.
2. CLERKS OF COURTS: Negligence: Liability on Bond. Where the law specifically enjoins upon a court clerk the performance of certain acts which he negligently performs he is liable on his bond to the person injured by his negligence.
3. OFFICERS: Performance of Duty: Reasonable Care. Negligence on the part of an officer consists only in failure to use that degree of care which an ordinary reasonable and prudent man would exercise under the same or similar circumstances and conditions. A reasonable effort to perform the duties pertaining to such office is all the law requires.
4. OFFICERS: Performance of Duty: Burden of Proof. The law presumes a reasonable performance of official duty, and the burden is upon the person claiming negligence to show that the conduct of the officer has actually been negligent.
5. OFFICERS: Negligence: In Pari Delicto. An officer cannot be held liable for negligence in the performance of his duties if the injured party or his attorney contributed to the result in any way, as such party is in pari delicto and the law leaves him where it finds him.
6. CLERKS OF COURTS: Judgments: Duty to Issue Executions. It is the statutory duty of the clerk to issue an execution upon a judgment when requested so to do by the judgment holder. In an ordinary judgment language to the effect that the plaintiff have execution does not authorize the clerk to issue the execution until its issuance has been requested by the successful litigant; and where condemnation benefit judgments required an appropriation of condemnation damages before execution could be had, the sustaining of subsequent motions requesting special executions is not to be construed as a direction to the clerk to issue executions, but was the equivalent of incorporating in the judgment the usual language to the effect that the plaintiff have execution and placed it within the power of the plaintiff to have executions issued by the clerk upon request.
7. CLERKS OF COURTS: Request for Execution. After the clerk has been requested to issue executions it is his duty to issue the same with reasonable celerity, and a letter is a sufficient form of request. Ordinarily it would be sufficient for the clerk to issue the executions in time for them to be served by the return day therein named.
8. CLERKS OF COURTS: Issuance of Executions: Reasonable Diligence. Where the last day available for issuing executions before the judgments would expire was March 6th, and on March 2nd the plaintiff city had motions sustained authorizing the issuance of forty-six special executions, and on March 5th orders were entered as to twenty-one additional special executions, and the clerk was notified by letter on March 3rd and March 6th respectively, and it does not appear that the city notified the clerk that the judgments were about to expire, and the work in connection with the issuance of these special executions required a large amount of detail work and the clerk's office had a normal busy routine, and it appeared that neither the clerk nor his deputies had any knowledge of the circumstances amounting to an emergency, the delay of the clerk in failing to have the special executions issued until after March 6th is far from unreasonable and could not constitute negligence.
9. CLERKS OF COURTS: Judgments: Notice. Assuming that a court clerk is charged with constructive notice of the ten-year Statute of Limitations on judgments, the custody of the judgment roll of the court does not charge him with notice of the date on which each judgment was rendered. It would also be unreasonable to expect the clerk to ascertain whether a judgment is in danger of being outlawed whenever a praecipe for execution is filed, and if he should consult the record he could not know whether or not the life of the judgment had been extended by part payment.
10. CLERKS OF COURTS: Delay in Issuing Executions: Contributory Negligence. Where the attorney for the City of St. Louis had actual knowledge of the date of benefit judgments and the running of the statute and waited until a few days before the judgment's life was to expire before attempting to order executions, and when he did so failed to apprise the clerk of the existence of an emergency or the need for unusual haste, such action on the part of the city clearly contributed to the executions being issued too late and was contributory negligence and fault on the part of the city.
Appeal from Circuit Court of City of St. Louis. — Hon. William K. Koerner, Judge.
AFFIRMED.
E.H. Wayman for City of St. Louis.
(1) The court erred in sustaining the demurrers of defendants at the close of plaintiff's case and in taking the case from the jury. (a) In determining whether plaintiff has made a case to go to the jury, plaintiff's evidence must be accepted as true, together with all reasonable inferences that may be drawn from it. Mosely v. Sum, 130 S.W.2d 465, 344 Mo. 969; Cento v. Security Bldg. Co., 99 S.W.2d 1; Young v. Wheelock, 333 Mo. 992, 64 S.W.2d 950. (b) The clerk of the circuit court must perform the duties of his office with diligence, and he may not set up want of time as a defense when the duties may be performed by deputies. State ex rel. Funk v. Turner, 42 S.W.2d 594, 328 Mo. 604; Randol v. Garoutti, 78 Mo. App. 609; Knox County v. Humbolt, 110 Mo. 67; 46 C.J. 1036; 22 R.C.L. 461; State ex rel. v. Hackman, 265 S.W. 532, 305 Mo. 342; State ex rel. Kansas City v. Renick, 157 Mo. 292; Neal Blum Co. v. Rogers, 141 Ga. 808, 82 S.E. 280; First Natl. Bank of Sutherland v. Clements, 97 Iowa 542, 54 N.W. 197. (2) It was the duty of the clerk of the circuit court to issue executions by preparing them and delivering them to the sheriff, and the clerk and his surety are liable for the negligent failure of the clerk to prepare executions and deliver them to the sheriff in time to avoid plaintiff's damage. (a) The word "issue," as used in the statutes pertaining to the duties of the circuit clerk in issuing executions, particularly in Section 11676, Revised Statutes 1929, includes delivery to the sheriff. R.S. 1929, secs. 1158, 11676; Burton v. Deleplain, 25 Mo. App. 376; Peterson v. Carpenter, 108 Mich. 608; First Natl. Bank v. Dwight, 83 Mich. 191; Burrell v. Hollands, 29 N.Y.S. 515; Peace v. Ritchie, 132 Ill. 638; Webster v. Sharpe, 121 S.E. 911; Sralina v. Saravana, 173 N.E. 281, 341 Ill. 236; Snell v. Knowles, 87 S.W.2d 871. (b) It had been the practice and custom of the circuit clerk for many years to deliver executions to the sheriff, and the clerk and his surety are liable for a negligent failure to deliver executions to the sheriff in time to avoid plaintiff's damage. The court erred in excluding evidence of the practice and custom of the clerk in delivering executions to the sheriff. In re Bernays' Estate, 126 S.W.2d 209, 344 Mo. 135; Williams v. Williams, 30 S.W.2d 69, 325 Mo. 963; State ex inf. McKittrick v. Wymore, 132 S.W.2d 979, 343 Mo. 98; Grand Rapids v. Krakowski, 174 N.W. 201, 207 Mich. 483; Rhodes v. Bell, 230 Mo. 138; Heman v. Larkin, 99 Mo. App. 294. The court erred in holding in effect that the duties of the clerk of the circuit court of St. Louis could not be enlarged by the practice and custom of the clerk in delivering executions to the sheriff so as to make the clerk's surety liable for a failure to deliver executions with due diligence, even though plaintiff relied upon such practice and custom and was thereby damaged. United States v. Howard, 184 U.S. 676, 46 L.Ed. 754; State ex rel. Courtney v. Callaway, 237 S.W. 173, 208 Mo. App. 447; 11 C.J.S. 418; Grand Rapids v. Krakowski, 174 N.W. 201, 207 Mich. 483; United States v. Howard, 102 F. 77; Eames v. Claflin Co., 239 F. 631; Gulf Refining Co. v. Universal Ins. Co., 32 F.2d 555; Blythe v. Richards, 13 Am. Dec. 672, 10 Serg. Raule 261; State ex rel. v. F. D. Co., 112 S.E. 319, 91 W. Va. 191; 14 C.J.S. 1257. (c) The circuit clerk having held himself out to deliver the executions to the sheriff under color of office, if not by virtue of office, the clerk and his surety are liable for a negligent failure to deliver executions to the sheriff with diligence. City of Festus v. Kausler, 105 S.W.2d 646; State ex rel. v. Roth, 330 Mo. 105, 49 S.W.2d 109; Day v. Natl. Bond. Inv. Co., 99 S.W.2d 117; Richland County v. Amer. Surety Co., 92 S.C. 329, 75 S.E. 549; Hall v. Kimsey, 173 S.E. 437, 48 Ga. App. 605. (d) The circuit court ordered the clerk to issue the executions, and the clerk, being the ministerial officer of the court, was under the duty to perform the order with diligence, and the surety is liable for the negligent failure to perform the order of the court with diligence. St. Louis v. Thornton, 8 Mo. App. 27; State ex rel. v. Cockrell, 217 S.W. 524, 280 Mo. 269; 14 C.J.S. 1211, sec. 1; State ex rel. v. F. D. Co., 112 S.E. 319, 91 W. Va. 191. (3) The circuit clerk not even having prepared the executions, ordered issued by the court, before the expiration of limitation, a breach of the official bond was shown and plaintiff was entitled to recover. R.S. 1929, secs. 1158, 11676; State v. McLeod, 5 Jones' L. Rep. 318; McKiethen v. Blue, 149 N.C. 95; Snell v. Knowles, 87 S.W.2d 871. (4) The court erred in holding that the circuit clerk was not presumed to know that delivery to the sheriff within ten years from the date of judgment was necessary in order that a valid levy might be made under the executions. State ex rel. Jacobsmeyer v. Thatcher, 92 S.W.2d 640, 338 Mo. 622; State v. Weatherby, 129 S.W.2d 887, 344 Mo. 848; Multon v. Scully, 89 A. 944, 111 Me. 428; State ex rel. Phillips v. Green, 124 Mo. App. 80; Baltimore, etc., Railroad Co. v. Gaulter, 165 Ill. 233, 49 N.E. 256; 11 C.J. 910. (5) The court erred in holding that any lack of diligence on the part of the circuit clerk did not cause appellant's damage. R.S. 1929, secs. 1158, 11676; Burton v. Deleplain, 25 Mo. App. 376; Baltimore Ohio Railroad Co. v. Weedon, 78 F. 584.
Igoe, Carroll, Keefe McAfee for H. Sam Priest.
(1) Even on plaintiff's theory that by securing orders on March 2 and March 5, 1937, for executions, it had done everything incumbent upon it to enforce its judgment and that the duty of proceeding thenceforth was upon the court's officers, no cause of action is shown against respondent circuit clerk. (a) When the holder of a judgment has done everything necessary for him to do for the collection thereof, the Statute of Limitations is stayed pending the discharge of the various duties of public officials. R.S. 1929, secs. 886, 1113; Seested v. Dickey, 318 Mo. 192, 300 S.W. 1088; State ex rel. v. Producers' Gravel Co., 341 Mo. 1106, 21 S.W.2d 521; Friel v. Alewell, 318 Mo. 1, 298 S.W. 762; Burton v. Deleplain, 25 Mo. App. 376. (b) If, as appellant claims, it completed steps to enforce judgment prior to expiration of statute, the executions in this case are valid and there is no cause of action. (2) The requirement that the clerk "issue" executions does not include delivery by him to the sheriff. Sec. 8, Art. XXI, Char. of the City of St. Louis; R.S. 1929, secs. 1158, 3022, 11676; Burton v. Deleplain, 25 Mo. App. 376; Hoover v. Mo. Pac. Ry. Co., 115 Mo. 77; Davis v. McCann, 143 Mo. 172; Davis v. Roller, 106 Va. 46, 55 S.E. 4, 117 Am. St. Rep. 947. (a) The owner of a judgment has exclusive control over it and may proceed or desist from enforcing it, as he please, without interference from the clerk. R.S. 1929, secs. 1152-1155; Peoples Savs. Bank v. McDowell, 204 S.W. 406; Davis v. McCann, 143 Mo. 172; Hoover v. Mo. Pac. Ry. Co., 115 Mo. 77; St. Louis v. Wall, 124 S.W.2d 616. (3) The duties of the office of clerk of the circuit court are controlled by statute. Jefferson Standard Life Ins. Co. v. Buckner, 201 N.C. 78; Securities Finance Co. v. Gentry, 109 So. 220; Reed v. Turner, 200 N.C. 78; 46 C.J. 10673; State ex rel. Walker v. Bus, 36 S.W. 636; Shambaugh County Treas. v. City Bank, 226 N.W. 460, 65 A.L.R. 804; Dickenson v. Riley, 86 F.2d 385; Ohio Farmers Assn. v. Davis, 55 Ohio App. 329, 17 N.E.2d 924. (a) Powers and duties of the clerk cannot be amended by custom, and evidence of local practice was properly excluded. Walters v. Senf, 115 Mo. 524; Knox County v. Goggin, 105 Mo. 182; Davis v. Natl. Surety Co., 35 S.W.2d 560; Lee v. Fid. Deposit Co. of Maryland, 229 Ala. 546, 65 A.L.R. 811; 17 C.J., p. 473. (b) The clerk was under no duty by "color of office" to deliver executions to the sheriff. Lee v. Fidelity Deposit Co., 229 Ala. 546. There is no showing or offer to show that the clerk held himself out as having any such official duty. Weidler v. Arizona Power Co., 39 Ariz. 390, 7 P.2d 241. The evidence affirmatively shows that plaintiff's failure to enforce its process within time was because of its conclusion of law as to the amount of time available; not because of any reliance on any custom or "color of office" of the clerk. (4) There was no notice to the clerk of any emergency; the executions were ready for service in ample time for return to the term at which plaintiff had directed that they be returnable and there is no evidence of negligence or misfeasance on the part of the clerk. (a) Since it was plaintiff's duty to call for and control the enforcement of its executions, no act of the clerk can be regarded as the proximate cause of damage unless it be shown that but for such act plaintiff would have enforced its judgment. Failure of plaintiff to call for and see to the enforcement of its executions was the proximate cause of its damage, if any. Mayfield v. K.C. So. Ry. Co., 337 Mo. 79, 85 S.W.2d 116; Stoll v. First Natl. Bank, 132 S.W.2d 676; Feeherty v. Sullivan, 129 S.W.2d 926. (b) The clerk was under no duty to do anything in connection with the executions in question until a request was received from the comptroller. Sec. 8, Art. XXI, Char. City of St. Louis; R.S. 1929, sec. 11676; State ex rel. Skrainka Const. Co. v. Reber, 226 Mo. 229, 126 S.W. 397; St. Louis v. Wall, 124 S.W.2d 616. (c) The record affirmatively shows that the executions were not barred. (5) There is no presumption that one knows the law as applied to particular facts nor as to the extent of private rights. McIntyre v. Casey, 182 S.W. 966; State ex inf. McKittrick v. Cameron, 342 Mo. 830; 22 C.J., pp. 150-151. (a) The clerk is not presumed to know (a) when the Statute of Limitations would expire as to executions in question or (b) whether the Statute of Limitations applied after orders for executions had been obtained. (b) There is no presumption that the clerk knows the facts disclosed by files and records in his office. Tong v. Matthews, 23 Mo. 437. (6) Plaintiff's petition wholly fails to state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action and is not good even after trial. (a) There is no allegation that the clerk could, in the exercise of reasonable diligence, have issued the executions by March 6th. (b) The allegations of the petition affirmatively show that the executions were not barred by the statute. R.S. 1929, secs. 886, 1113; Excelsior Street Furnace Co. v. Smith, 17 S.W.2d 378; Mill Co. v. Sugg, 169 Mo. 30, 69 S.W. 359.
Thomas Bond for Fidelity Deposit Company of Maryland.
(1) It is not the duty of the circuit clerk to deliver executions to the sheriff. Burton v. Deleplain, 25 Mo. App. 376; Davis v. McCann, 143 Mo. 172; R.S. 1929, secs. 1152-1158. (2) Plaintiff has absolute and exclusive control over a judgment in his favor, and may enforce it or not, or may forgive it at his pleasure. Burton v. Deleplain, 25 Mo. App. 376; Hoover v. Mo. Pac. Ry. Co., 115 Mo. 77; Davis v. McCann, 143 Mo. 172. (3) Executions are the plaintiff's process, and plaintiff has sole control over their issuance without interference by the clerk or other court officers. Hoover v. Mo. Pac. Ry. Co., 115 Mo. 77; Davis v. McCann, 143 Mo. 172. (4) The circuit clerk is a ministerial officer, and his powers and duties are purely statutory. Read v. Turner, 200 N.C. 773; Jefferson Standard Life Ins. Co. v. Buckner, 201 N.C. 78; Securities Finance Co. v. Gentry, 109 So. 220. (a) They cannot be enlarged by any act of individuals or by court order. 46 C.J. 1067. (b) Nor can the clerk's powers and duties be enlarged by custom — and evidence of custom was properly excluded. 17 C.J. 476; Knox County v. Goggin, 105 Mo. 182; Walters v. Senf, 115 Mo. 524; Davis v. Natl. Surety Co., 35 S.W.2d 560; Lee v. Fidelity Deposit Co. of Md., 229 Ala. 546. (5) The evidence admits that the writs were all issued and in the hands of the sheriff in ample time for service, execution and return to the term of court to which plaintiff had made them returnable (June Term, 1937). Absent any notice of an emergency or need for haste, this was reasonable diligence. (6) The presumption that everyone knows the law applies only to the general law; it does not extend to private rights and interests, or to difficult legal questions; nor are persons presumed to know how the courts will construe the law; nor can the presumption be used to supply a fact material to the cause of action. 22 C.J., sec. 85, pp. 150-151; McIntyre v. Casey, 182 S.W. 966; State ex inf. McKittrick v. Cameron, 342 Mo. 830. (7) The circuit clerk was not presumed to know, (a) The facts as shown by the files and records in his office. Tong v. Matthews, 23 Mo. 437. (b) Whether or not, under these facts, the Statute of Limitations would expire March 6, 1937. (c) That the action of appellant's law department taken March 2nd and March 5th, respectively, was insufficient to stay the Statute of Limitations. (8) The executions were valid and could have been enforced against the property described therein. (9) The court correctly instructed the jury that appellant was not entitled to recover.
Action by the State at the relation of the City of St. Louis on the official bond of the Clerk of the Circuit Court for the Eighth Judicial Circuit. The clerk and his surety are defendants. A verdict for the defendants was directed. The relator took an involuntary nonsuit, moved ineffectually to set it aside and appealed to this court. The record facts are these:
Early in 1927 there was pending in the St. Louis Circuit Court a condemnation [111] proceeding against certain landowners whose property was desired by the city for a new plaza. As provided by law, the city sought and obtained an assessment of special benefits against lands in the improvement area not taken or damaged in the making of the plaza. Judgment for these benefit assessments was rendered March 7, 1927. Under Sections 1038 and 1278, R.S. Mo. 1939, the power of the city to cause executions to be issued on this judgment would automatically expire ten years after its rendition, that is, upon March 7, 1937, unless the judgment had been revived by scire facias or kept alive by part payment. The judgment provided that special executions might be issued against the various tracts of land involved upon motions filed therefor by the city and after a showing had been made that funds to pay condemnation damages had been appropriated. The city took no steps whatever toward enforcing its judgment until March 2, 1937. As March 7, 1937, fell on Sunday, this left only four days of the life of the judgment during which the necessary procedure for issuing the executions could be taken. On March 2nd the city filed motions in the division of the circuit court which had rendered the original judgment, requesting special executions against forty-six separate tracts of land. These motions were accompanied by a certified copy of an ordinance appropriating money for the payment of the condemnation damages. On March 5th similar motions were filed for twenty-one more special executions. These were also filed in the division in which the original judgment had been rendered. All of the motions were sustained. At each time, and before leaving the divisional court room, counsel for the city wrote out and handed to the deputy clerk in that division a memorandum of the minute entry to be made in the record of the court showing the action of the judge in sustaining the motions.
The office of the circuit clerk is situated upon another floor of the court house from that on which is found the court room in which these proceedings were had. In that office the clerk kept, as he was required to do, an order book in which praecipes for processes of various kinds, including executions, are entered. Counsel for the city did not enter an order in this book on March 2nd, the day on which his first motions were sustained, nor did he, in leaving the court house, even go to the clerk's office. He did not at that time orally or in writing instruct the clerk or any of his deputies to issue the desired executions. On March 3rd, the day following the action of the court on the first forty-six motions, counsel wrote a letter to the clerk requesting that executions be issued in these forty-six instances. Likewise on March 5th counsel made no entry in the order book asking for the twenty-one additional executions adjudged on that day, but again contented himself with writing a letter, received by the clerk on the following day, requesting their issuance. Neither of these letters was introduced in evidence and it is not contended that in either of them counsel stated that the Statute of Limitations was about to run on his judgment nor that any other special emergency or reason for unusual haste existed.
None of the executions were issued on or before the 6th of March. Shortly thereafter they were prepared. The attorney for the city did not call at the clerk's office to get these executions, but they were delivered by the clerk directly to the sheriff. The first issued were originally made returnable to the April Term. However, it appeared that they could not be served and sales had thereunder in time for return at that term and, at the request of the city's attorney, they were amended and made returnable to the June Term. The rest of the executions were originally made returnable to the June Term. All were placed in the hands of the sheriff in sufficient time for him to levy them, have sales thereunder and make returns at such term.
The execution defendants filed motions to quash on the ground that the process was not issued until the life of the judgment had expired. These were sustained.
In passing on the propriety of the action of the trial court in directing a verdict for the defendants, we have in mind the well-established rule that the court must consider as true all of the evidence favorable to the plaintiff, disregarding that evidence which is favorable to the defendants where any conflict exists. [State ex rel. Sirkin Company v. Hostetter, 340 Mo. 211, 101 S.W.2d 50; Becker v. Aschen, 344 Mo. 1107, 131 S.W.2d 533.] We must also draw from the evidence all reasonable inferences of fact favorable to the plaintiff. [6 Encyc. of Pleading and Practice, 442.]
[112] [2, 3, 4, 5] The breach of defendant clerk's bond, here assigned, is allegedly negligent failure to issue these executions on or before March 6th. The clerk of a circuit court is an administrative officer, whose functions are largely ministerial in character. Where the law specifically enjoins upon him the performance of certain actions which he negligently performs, he is liable on his bond to the person injured by his negligence. [Mechem, Public Officers, sec. 667.] But negligence on the part of an officer consists only in a failure to use that degree of care which an ordinary reasonable and prudent man would exercise under the same or similar circumstances and conditions. A reasonable effort to perform the duties pertaining to such office is all the law requires. [Sharp v. Brown (Idaho), 221 P. 139.] The law presumes the reasonable performance of official duty and the burden is upon the person claiming neglect to show that the conduct of the officer has actually been negligent. [Mechem, Public Officers, sec. 677.] Moreover, as stated by Mechem, supra, sec. 680: "It is equally true that if the result complained of would have followed, notwithstanding their (the officers') misconduct, or if the injured party himself contributed to the result in any degree by his own fault or neglect, they cannot be held responsible. If the position of the injured party would have been just the same had not the alleged misconduct occurred, he has no legal ground of complaint; and if his own conduct or the conduct of his attorney contributed to the result, he is in pari delicto, and the law leaves him where it finds him." In this connection it is well to remember that in a case founded upon the alleged negligence of the defendant, if the evidence of the plaintiff himself shows contributory negligence, a verdict should be directed. [Hafner v. St. Louis Transit Co., 197 Mo. 196, l.c. 201, 202, 94 S.W. 291; Bruce v. United Railways Co., 181 Mo. App. 93, 163 S.W. 548.] Due diligence on the part of the clerk, of course, requires that he perform such acts as he is required to perform by law with reasonable celerity and within a reasonable time. [Randol v. Garoutte, 78 Mo. App. 609; 22 R.C.L. 461.]
We are called upon to determine from the record whether or not the defendant clerk was under any duty to issue these executions on or prior to March 6th. If he were not under such duty under the facts of this case his delay until after the sixth cannot be characterized as negligent. We are also called upon to determine whether or not the relator, through its attorney, was guilty of fault or negligence, contributing to the injury which it claims to have received.
The statutes of this State make it the duty of the clerk to issue an execution upon a judgment when requested so to do by the judgment holder. [Secs. 1322 and 13295, R.S. Mo. 1939.] Executions are not issued by the court although they are based upon a judgment rendered by the court. It is a matter of general knowledge among the profession that a judgment ordinarily concludes "And that the plaintiff (or defendant) have execution hereof." This or equivalent language in a judgment, however, does not authorize the clerk to issue the execution until its issuance has been requested by the successful litigant. It merely creates in the litigant a power to cause the clerk to issue the execution. [8 Encyc. of Pleading and Practice, 380; State v. Pilsbury, 35 La. Ann. 408; 1 Freeman on Executions (3 Ed.), sec. 23.] In the present case the original judgment had not provided for the immediate issuance of an execution. More accurately stated, it had not created a power in the plaintiff to immediately cause the clerk to issue the execution. It had provided that the plaintiff might have execution upon making a showing to the court that it had done certain things with respect to paying condemnation damages. When the plaintiff, upon motions, made such showing the court's order in sustaining the motions was not to be construed as a direction to the clerk to issue the executions, but was merely tantamount to incorporating in the judgment the usual language "and that the plaintiff have executions hereof." In other words the action of the court in sustaining these motions placed it within the power of the relator to have executions issued by the clerk when it should request such action.
After the request for the issuance of the executions was made to the clerk by letter, it was of course his duty to proceed to issue the same with reasonable celerity. [Randol v. Garoutte, supra.] Ordinarily, it would seem that all he would be required to do would be to issue the executions in time for them to be served by the return day therein named. [Cf. State, to the use of McMahan Huston v. Rollins, 13 Mo. 179.]
[113] But it is contended by relator that the peculiar circumstances of this case required speedier action on behalf of the clerk. In this connection the full situation should be considered. The clerk was asked to prepare some sixty-seven special executions. The mere physical work of filling in the printed forms, comparing property descriptions with those contained in the judgment, calculating the interest due and entering the amount of the debt and costs on the back of the executions, together with the making of record entries in the execution docket would require many hours of labor. There is evidence that the mere mechanical filling in of the printed forms took a competent stenographer eleven hours. But it must be remembered that the clerk had much more to do than simply filling in these forms.
In this connection it is also to be remembered that the clerk and his deputies had other work to do besides the issuance of these executions. We take notice of what every judge and lawyer well knows that cases are constantly being filed in which the clerk must issue process. He is required to issue subpoenas in cases set for trial. He must record in the permanent records of the court its proceedings. He makes transcripts on change of venue and appeal and he keeps complicated books of account in which he enters the financial transactions occurring in his office. All of this requires adherence to a reasonable office routine. In the absence of any actual or constructive knowledge of an emergency requiring the immediate issuance of these executions, the delay shown in this case is far from unreasonable and could not constitute negligence. The record clearly shows that neither the clerk nor his deputies had any actual knowledge of the circumstances amounting to an emergency now relied on by the relator.
Relator seeks to charge the clerk with constructive knowledge of such facts. Everyone, it is said, is presumed to know the law. Hence the clerk must have known of the ten-year Statute of Limitations. For the purpose of the argument it may be assumed that the clerk did know that the statutory life of a judgment is ten years. Can he be presumed to know the date on which this judgment was rendered? It is true that he had custody of the judgment roll of the court, but the records of every circuit clerk contain thousands of judgments. No clerk could be called upon to remember the date of each judgment rendered. It is equally unreasonable to expect that whenever a praecipe for execution is filed, the clerk will hasten to his abstract of judgments to determine whether or not that particular judgment is in danger of being outlawed. Moreover, should he consult the record he could not know whether or not the life of the judgment had been extended by part payment. [Sec. 1038, R.S. Mo. 1939.]
Viewed in this light it is clear that the relator's evidence, considered in the light most favorable to it, wholly fails to show any negligence on behalf of the clerk. Furthermore, the said evidence clearly demonstrates the existence of contributory negligence and fault on the part of the city. Its attorney had actual knowledge of the date of the judgment and the running of the statute. Yet he waited until a few days before the judgment's life was to expire before attempting to enforce it. Moreover, when he did order executions he failed to apprise the clerk of the existence of an emergency or the need for unusual haste. Such action on the part of the city clearly contributed to the result of which it now complains.
It follows that the trial court correctly directed a verdict for the defendants and the judgment below must be affirmed. It is so ordered. All concur.