Matthews v. Gloss
Matthews v. Gloss
Opinion of the Court
delivered the opinion of the court.
This was a suit before a justice of the peace, under the landlord and tenant law of St. Louis county, to recover possession of a certain tenement in St. Louis. On the trial before the justice, the plaintiff recovered judgment, and the defendant took
The record shows that the affidavit for the appeal was made by Cecelie Lecompte, who claims to be the landlord of the tenant, Gloss. The recognizance is also subscribed by her and Rene Lecompte.
The Land Court erred in sustaining the appellee’s motion to dismiss. That court should have permitted the appellant to file a good and sufficient recognizance, and ought to have overruled the motion to dismiss. The statute declares that “no appeal allowed by a justice shall be dismissed on account that there is no recognizance, or that the recognizance given is defective, if the appellant, or some person for him, will, before the motion to dismiss is determined, enter, before the court, into such recognizance as he ought to have entered into before the allowance of the appeal, and pay all costs that shall be incurred by reason of such defect or omission.” (Justices’ Courts, § 17, art. 8, R. C. 1845, p. 670.)
The judgment of the Land Court must, consequently, be reversed, and the cause remanded ;
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