Ewing v. Brooks
Ewing v. Brooks
Opinion of the Court
On the 20th day of January, 1872, J. R. Oline and R. B. Higgins executed their promissory note for $1,050, payable ten days thereafter, to Isaac Treadway, who assigned it to the plaintiff, Ewing. On the 9th day of April, 1872, plaintiff instituted a suit on said note in the circuit court' of Cass county, against Oline and Eeely, the administrators of Higgins. Oline afterwards died, and
The suit was properly commenced in the circuit court of Cass county. While pending there Cline died, and the Legislature passed an act amendatory of the act establishing the Cass county court of common pleas, approved March 17th, 1873, conferring upon said court exclusive original jurisdiction within and for said county, of actions against executors and administrators upon demands against them in their representative capacity. There is no provision in that act requiring causes pending in the circuit court against executors and administrators to be transferred to that court. There is nothing in the act to indicate that it was the intention, thereby to interfere with causes then pending in any other court, which were properly commenced in such court.
The order of the circuit court transferring this cause to
The judgment of the common pleas court is reversed, and as that court will cease to exist on the 31st day of December, inst., (Fx parte Snyder,) 64 Mo. 58, the circuit court of Cass county is directed to reinstate the cause on the docket of said court, and to proceed to hear and determine the same, as if said order transferring it had never been made, and the judgment of the common pleas court dismissing the cause had not been rendered.
Reversed.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Ewing, in Error v. Brooks
- Status
- Published