Benedict v. Thompson

2 Doug. 299
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 15, 1846
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 2 Doug. 299 (Benedict v. Thompson) 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
Benedict v. Thompson, 2 Doug. 299 (Mich. 1846).

Opinion

Whipple, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

1. The first question which is presented for our deter-mination is, whether the appeal in this case is well taken. The statute (R. S. 1838, p. 379, <§§ 121,125,) provides that “ any person, complainant or defendant, who may think himself aggrieved by the decree or final order of the court of chancery, may appeal therefrom to the'supreme court and that “upon any order or decree being brought by appeal to the supreme court, that court shall examine all errors that shall be assigned or found in such order or decree, ” &c. Some difficulty has arisen in giving a construction to this statute. Questions arising under it have been presented for our determination upon several occasions, and we have generally confined our opinions to the particular case before the court, without attempting to lay down any general rule by which the right of appeal could be tested. It [301]*301would, indeed, be almost impossible to define the boundaries of this right in all cases. Our judicial system, from the organization of the territory to the present day, shows that the right of a party to have his cause reviewed by the highest judicatory has, with few exceptions, been granted by express statute ; and we should be indisposed to restrict this salutary right by a stringent construction of the statute allowing appeals from the court of chancery. Policy and propriety both demand, however, that too broad a construction of the statute should not be given. Such a construction would embarrass the hearing of causes upon their real merits, protract litigation, and be followed by delays that would amount to a practical denial of justice. Applying to the question before us the decisions of this court in other causes argued during the present term, (Wing v. Warner, and Prentis v. Rice, ante pp. 288, 296,) we are of the opinion that the appeal was authorized by the statute, and that the preliminary objection to the jurisdiction of this court must be ove2-ruled.

2. Another question presented by this case, and which arises upon the assignment of errors, is, whether, on this appeal, it is competent for this court to review the decree of August, 1842, directing the appraisement, set off, and conveyance of the mortgaged premises. It is to be observed that under the statute above referred to, this court can only examine the errors that may be assigned or found in the order or decree appealed from. On behalf of the appellant it is insisted that it is competent for this court to review every other order or decree in the cause, touching the merits. Will our statute warrant this construction ? The decisions of other tribunals on this subject, are somewhat confused and contradictory. Hoffman says that it is the general rule that only such parts of the decree as are complained of in the petition of appeal, will be decided upon by the court of errors. 2 Hoff. Ch. Pr., [302]*30248. In Sands v. Codwise, 4 John. R. 601, Chancellor Kent sustains this rule. In Atkinson v. Marks, 1 Cowen 691, Mr. Justice Sutherland remarked that as the appeal was from the final decree, it opened for consideration all prior orders or decrees in any way connected with it. The same rule is laid down by Chief Justice Spencer, in Jaques v. The Methodist E. Church, 17 John. R. 549. In Wilson v. Troup, 2 Cowen 195, it was determined that an appeal from a final order brought up an interlocutory order suppressing depositions which might bear upon the final decree. Upon appeals to the House of Lords in England, the appellant is confined to the objections specified in the petition of appeal. In Bouchier v. Dillon, 1 Bligh. N. S. 688, the appellant was permitted to amend his petition so as to extend his appeal to orders not embraced in the original petition. Upon an appeal from the decree of the vice chancellor, in Orange Co. Bank v. Fink, the court held that an appeal from a final decree, more than nine months after the entry of an interlocutory order, did not have the effect of bringing up the merits of such order for examination. 7 Paige, 87.

Was, then, the decree of the chancellor in this cause, directing the mortgaged premises to be appraised, &c., a final, or an interlocutory decree? I am of the opinion that it was a final decree. It was a decree upon the merits, and settled the subject matter of litigation between the par-lies : it was, in the language of Chief Justice Savage, referred to in 7 Paige 19, “ the last decree which was necessary to give the parties the full and entire benefit of the judgment of the court.” No questions were reserved upon which the judgment of the court could thereafter be invoked. All the facts necessary to an adjudication upon the whole merits of the controversy were before the court; and its judgment was just as conclusive as respects the merits, as though it had been the last decree in the cause. [303]*303In order to carry into execution the decree, the master was directed to cause the premises to be appraised and set off to the complainant, and to execute a deed to him, in the event of his signifying his acceptance of the appraisement. It also became necessary, in order to consummate the proceedings, that an order should be taken in respect to the doings of the master; b.utthis order never brings before the chancellor the merits of the former or final decree, but simply the regularity of the proceedings of the master: the court, in other words, examines into his doings, to ascertain whether its mandate has been obeyed. This last order confirming the acts of the master maybe the subject, of appeal, and such appeal would bring into review such other matters as are necessarily connected with it. “ The usual decree, in mortgage cases, for the sale of the property, and the distribution of the funds among the parties, and finally disposing of the question of costs, is a final decree.” Mills v. Hoag, 7 Paige, 19. The same doctrine is asserted by the supreme court of the United States, in Ray v. Law, 3 Cranch, 179. If the decree in such cases is final, it would be difficult to perceive why the decree directing the appraisement, &c. of the mortgaged premises, is not a final decree. The rights of the parties, and the merits of the controversy, are just as fully settled in the one case as in the other: the only difference is in the mode of executing the decree. In the one case, the premises are exposed to sale at public auction; and in the other, they are appraised and set off to the mortgagee. The proceedings in both cases have the same object in view, viz : the satisfaction of the amount due on the mortgage. Whether the money arising from the sale of the land, or the land- itself, is applied in liquidation of the debt, can make no difference as to the character of the decree. The decree, then, of the 31st August, 1842, directing the mortgaged premises lo be ap[304]*304praised. &c., was a final decree, and one which the defendant might have brought before us by appeal.

It appears by the transcript, that the premises were appraised and conveyed to the complainant, by the master, on the 26th August, 1843; and that, on the 4th September following, he filed his report showing the manner in which he had executed the final decree of 31st August, 1842.

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Bluebook (online)
2 Doug. 299, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/benedict-v-thompson-mich-1846.