Alexander v. Sloan
This text of 242 N.W.2d 904 (Alexander v. Sloan) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wisconsin Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
The temptation is strong to affirm the order of the trial judge that is here challenged. It has much to recommend as an entirely appropriate resolving of the question of where this particular action is to be tried. However, there is a roadblock here to such affirmance that cannot be surmounted. That roadblock presents itself in the form of a prior and unappealed order of another circuit court judge in the same circuit denying a motion for stay of proceedings under sec. 262.19, Stats., to permit trial of the ease in another state.
Ordinarily the only question to be resolved on a motion for a stay of proceedings to permit trial in a different state is whether, as a matter of substantial justice, the particular trial should be tried to another forum.1 Such motion is to be filed with the answer or before it, and the issues are to be tried to the court in advance of the trial on the merits.2 There is no transcript or memo[149]*149randum decision in the record before us, so we cannot say if the second order, entered by the second or successor judge, was entered before or after a trial before the first judge. The record does not show any motion for a new trial nor order granting one. Counsel for the defendants argues that the order granting a stay, granted by the second judge, was made after a “rehearing.”3
The conclusion is compelled that such “rehearing” before the second judge was as to the order entered, twenty-three months earlier, by the first judge. It is permissible for a court to review its own orders and judgments at any time within sixty days after service and notice of entry but not more than sixty days after the end of the term of entry.4 Even within such sixty-day period, we do not see this statute as creating the right of a second judge to review an order entered by a first judge, at least not in the absence of a showing of unavailability of such first judge who entered the order sought to be reviewed. However, in the case before us, it appears that even the power of the first judge to review and reverse the order denying a stay of proceedings expired at the end of sixty days after the end of the term during which it was entered.5
The initial order in this case, denying a stay of proceedings for the purpose of instituting action in another state, was filed on December 21, 1971. Such filing constitutes entry of such order.6 The term of court at which [150]*150such order was entered commenced on the first Monday in October, 1971, and ran until the first Monday in January, 1972.7 Sixty days from the end of such term became the last day for making a motion for review under sec. 269.46 (3), Stats. The defendants did not renew a motion for a stay of proceedings until September 17, 1973. Even if addressed to the first judge who entered the first denial of motion for a stay, that was too late. Not having been appealed from, the order denying a stay of proceedings became unreviewable sixty days after the end of the term in which it was entered.
By the Court. — Order vacated.
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
242 N.W.2d 904, 73 Wis. 2d 145, 1976 Wisc. LEXIS 1128, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/alexander-v-sloan-wis-1976.