Aldrich v. Chubb

35 Mich. 350, 1877 Mich. LEXIS 18
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 9, 1877
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 35 Mich. 350 (Aldrich v. Chubb) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Aldrich v. Chubb, 35 Mich. 350, 1877 Mich. LEXIS 18 (Mich. 1877).

Opinion

Graves, J.:

Worthington, Meek & Cheeney, a firm of Milwaukee, Wisconsin, on January 24, 1874, made their promissory note for four hundred dollars and interest at ten per cent., on three months’ time, payable to Chubb’s order, and Aldrich, claiming that Chubb negotiated the note to him, and guaranteed its collection, and had become fixed with liability, brought this suit in the superior court of Grand Rapids to enforce the guaranty. He averred the making of the note by Worthington, Meek & Cheeney, its negotiation and endorsement over by Chubb to him, and Chubb’s contract of guaranty. He then averred further that when the note matured he brought his action at law upon it against the makers “ and prosecuted the same with all due diligence to a judgment, and did cause execution to be issued thereon, whieh was returned unsatisfied and unpaid;” “that he expended a large sum of money in prosecuting said suit and in the payment of the costs therein? to wit: the sum of one hundred dollars, and that by reason of the non-payment and non-collection of said judgment, the defendant herein became and was and is liable to pay the plaintiff the amount of said note and interest according to the tenor and effect thereof, and also the amount of said costs and disbursements, and being so liable, did, at the city of Grand Rapids, on, to wit, the third day of January, 1874, promise,” etc.

The declaration was very general. It omitted to set up the time of the guaranty, and there was no allegation showing in what court or when or in what place or country the proceedings against the makers were carried on, or showing-*any of the particulars of such proceedings. There was, however, no demurrer, and defendant simply pleaded the general issue, and the cause was tried before a jury. The note and guaranty having been introduced, the plaintiff offered in evidence a record of proceedings had in tne county court of Milwaukee, in Wisconsin, and purporting to be the record of a suit there by Aldrich against Worthington, Meek & Cheeney, the makers of the note, and apparently in accordance with the mode of procedure which prevails in [337]*337Wisconsin. It set out a summons to answer the complaint in the action, the sheriff’s certificate of personal service on Worthington and Meek and inability to find Che'eney. It next set out the complaint of Aldrich against Worthington, Meek & Cheeney, charging them as makers of the note in question, and demanding judgment for the amount and the protest fees. The summons and complaint were dated April 30, 1874, and service on Worthington and Meek was certified as made June 7th afterwards. Next after these entries the record stated that all the defendants answered by attorney on the third of June, 1874, and generally.denied every thing in the complaint. Following this was an entry of the following tenor: “And afterwards, to-wit, on the second day of January, 1875, came the defendants George.Worthington and William C. Meek, and filed their notice and copy of order of adjudication in the words and figures following, to-wit:

“County court, Milwaukee county,

Moses V. Aldrich v. George Worthington and William C. Meek impleaded with others.

“ Take notice that upon the papers and proceedings heretofore had in the above entitled action, and upon a certified copy of the order of the district court of the United States for the eastern district of Wisconsin, adjudging the defendants herein, George Worthington and William C. Meek, bankrupts, a copy of which order is herewith served upon you, the said defendants, Worthington and Meek, will, on the 2d day of January, 1875, at the opening of court on *said day, or as soon thereafter as counsel can be heard, apply to the court in which this action is pending, for a stay of proceedings in this action as to them until the question of their discharge from their debts in bankruptcy be determined. Dated December 23, 1874.

“J. F. McMullen,

“Attorney for Defendants Worthington and Meelc.

“To Finches, Lynde & Miller,

“Plaintiff’s Attorneys.”

Succeeding the entry of this notice, appeared a certain proceeding in bankruptcy in the district court of the United [338]*338States for the eastern district of Wisconsin, in the matter of • petitioning creditors against Worthington and Meek, certified by the clerk of the court of the United States, and this proceeding purported to bear date October 8th, 1874, and to be an adjudication, on the admission of Worthington & Meek, that they had committed an act of bankruptcy as had been alleged against them, and that they were bankrupts within the meaning of the act of congress. It further purported to have ordered that Worthington and Meek should within five days make and deliver or transmit by mail, post paid, to the marshal a schedule of their creditors, and inventory of their estate, in the form and verified in the manner required of the petitioning debtor by the act of congress.

The record of the county court then goes on to say, that on •this motion and showing the stay prayed for, namely, that proceedings against Worthington and Meek in the suit on the mote might be stayed until the question of their discharge from 'their debts in bankruptcy should be determined, was granted by the county court.

Succeeding the entry of this special motion and the evidence adduced to support it, and the allowance of the stay as moved for, the record further set forth an individual answer by Cheeney, on July 8th, 1875, by other counsel, and in which he denied liability. It was entitled as in a case pending against-the three defendants. The next entry set out a trial by jury of the issue raised by Cheeney’s answer and a ^finding for Aldrich against him for four hundred and fifty dollars and seven cents damages, a motion for new trial by Cheeney and a denial of that motion, and judgment in favor of Aldrich against Cheeney alone, for the damages found by the jury, and costs of suit, being fifty-seven dollars and seventy-three cents. A further entry appeared under date of January 10th, 1876, of an order of the court, reciting that judgment had been entered against George Worthington and William C. Meek by mistake, and ordering, on motion of the attorneys for Aldrich, that it should be vacated as against them, and that the record be corrected so as to show judgment entered only against Cheeney. The [339]*339record then states that judgment was docketed January 18th, 1876.

The next entry was of execution in an action by Aldrich against Worthington, Meek and Cheeney, hut upon a judgment in such action against Cheeney alone, and a certificate of the sheriff that he could find no property belonging to Cheeney, and therefore returned the writ wholly unsatisfied. The entry purports that the execution was issued January 29th, 1876, and made returnable in sixty days after its receipt, that the return of nulla bona was endorsed on the very day the writ was issued, but that the process was not filed in court until February 16th, 1876.

When the plaintiff offered this documentary proof from Wisconsin in the court below, it was objected to by defendant’s counsel “for the reason that the declaration in this cause did not name the court nor the place where said judgment was obtained, nor whether it was a court of competent jurisdiction, and gave the defendant no information where the said judgment could be found.” The objection was overruled and the evidence was admitted. The defendant’s counsel excepted.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
35 Mich. 350, 1877 Mich. LEXIS 18, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/aldrich-v-chubb-mich-1877.