Busch v. Jones

53 N.W. 1051, 94 Mich. 223, 1892 Mich. LEXIS 1107
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 22, 1892
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 53 N.W. 1051 (Busch v. Jones) 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
Busch v. Jones, 53 N.W. 1051, 94 Mich. 223, 1892 Mich. LEXIS 1107 (Mich. 1892).

Opinion

Durand, J.

This suit was begun by summons on December 24, 1890, to recover on a supersedeas bond executed by the defendants to the plaintiff, and in which bond the defendant Wilcox is the principal, and the other defendants are sureties. The defendants pleaded the general issue, and gave notice of set-off.

This bond was given by the defendant Wilcox and his sureties on the removal by him from the Wayne circuit to. this Court of the case of Busch v. Wilcox, reported in 82'. Mich. 315, 336. The action in that case was based upon an alleged fraud growing out of the misstatements of the-agent of Wilcox in reference to the quantity and quality of certain pine timber which Busch, by the terms of a logging contract, then entered into, agreed to cut and haul for Wilcox. Busch recovered a judgment in that case for-his damages, which was finally affirmed in this Court on December 5, 1890, at the sum of $5,000. The facts areverv fully stated by Chief Justice Cdampdin in the case-referred to, and only such facts will be stated here as may be necessary to a determination of the ease made by tifia. record.

[225]*225During the pendency of the suit for fraud, and in 1887, Wilcox, who, on account of the legal objections which; interposed, could not make the claim which he asserted! against Busch available as a set-off in that case, brought, his action against Busch in the Wayne circuit court, claiming for certain unliquidated damages growing out of the-same logging contract, and also for certain overpayments; made thereon during the winter and spring of 1884. Busch gave notice of set-off, covering certain items .of damage-growing out of his services in taking care of and towing" the logs to Cheboygan. This latter case was thus at issue when the case now being considered was begun. Wilcox,, desiring to make his claim for overpayments available as a» set-off in the present case, furnished the particulars thereof under his notice, and, upon the objection of auier action pendant being made, attempted to discontinue the case of Wilcox v. Busch, referred to. This he was not permitted to do, on account of the prohibition contained in 3 How. Stat. § 7370a, which provides—

That in any action hereafter commenced in this State* when the defendant has given notice of set-off, the plaintiff shall not be allowed to discontinue his suit, or submit to a nonsuit, without the consent of the defendant."

Thereupon Wilcox filed a withdrawal from that case of the items of overpayment, and thereafter the case proceeded to trial on the remaining items of Wilcox’s claim, and upon the items of set-off pleaded by Busch; and a judgment was finally rendered therein, in favor of Busch, for the; sum of $931; the circuit judge charging the jury in that; case that as Wilcox had withdrawn the item of overpayment from the case, and transferred it to another case for adjustment, they could not consider that question. These, items of overpayment were then urged by Wilcox as a set-off in this suit; the plaintiff objecting — First, that Wilcox [226]*226had no right to withdraw them from the ease of Wilcox v. Busch; and, second, that the claim under or on account of them was barred by the statute of limitations. The circuit judge ruled against the objection on the first proposition; but in his charge to the jury, on the second proposition, he held that the claim was outlawed, and directed a verdict for the full amount of the bond sued upon, thus depriving the defendant Wilcox of all claim under the set-off pleaded. This is claimed as error.

We agree that the circuit judge was correct in his ruling that Wilcox had the right to withdraw his demand for over-payments from the suit of Wilcox v. Busch. This did not work a discontinuance of the suit. The object of the statute referred to is to enable the defendant to proceed .and prove his set-off in the case begun against him, and not to permit the plaintiff in a suit, at his own convenience or desire, to discontinue it, and thus deprive the defendant of a right which he acquires as soon as he submits his demand by way of set-off to adjudication in a suit begun against him. This substantial right is to be determined by the conditions existing at the time the set-off is pleaded; .and, if at that time the defendant’s demand is of such a character that it can be legally employed as a set-off in the particular suit in which he pleads it as such, he is entitled to remain in court, in the same suit, until adjudication is had upon it, and if he establishes it he is entitled to a judgment for all exceeding the claim the plaintiff may prove against him in the case. And this right remains, regardless of the fact that the plaintiff .proves or does not prove any claim against him, and regardless of whether or ■not plaintiff withdraws any portion of his claim from consideration in the case, or whether or not he offers any proof at all in his behalf. So long as the case itself stands, the right of the defendant to prove his set-off remains, and [227]*227■the purpose of the statute is accomplished. This was done' in the case referred to, and Busch recovered judgment for the amount of his set-off after Wilcox had withdrawn these items of overpayment from the consideration of both court •and jury. This was all that he, as the defendant in that suit, had a right to claim; and the items of overpayment referred to having been withdrawn by Wilcox, as stated, it cannot be said that they should be treated as res judicata.

This brings us to the discussion of whether or not' the circuit judge was right in holding that the items referred to were barred by the statute of limitations. It will be seen that all the claims and suits méntioned have grown out of the logging contract which was entered into by Busch and Wilcox in September, 1883. The contract provided that Busch was to cut into saw-logs, and put afloat in the waters of Lake Huron, all the pine timber upon certain lands described in a schedule attached to the contract, during the winter and spring of 1884, so that they might be sawed into lumber during the summer of 1884. If the weather or insurmountable obstacles prevented a full completion of the contract in that time, Busch was to have another year in which to complete it. For this work Wilcox was to pay Busch $4.25 per 1,000 feet, ■board measure, according to the rule and custom of scaling in Saginaw waters, to be scaled by a competent scaler to ■be agreed upon by the parties. Five thousand dollars of this sum was to be paid down, $5,000 was to be paid during the winter and spring of 1883 and 1884, and the balance, in full, was to be paid on the completion of the ■contract. Busch went to work under this contract, and cut, as was estimated, about 4,000,000 feet of the timber during that winter, and received from Wilcox, at different times down to April 15, 1884, the sum of $17,142.36. When ' the actual measurement was subsequently made, it was ascertained, as a matter of fact, that Busch had [228]*228cut only about 3,250,000 feet of logs, and that he had,, therefore, received considerably more-than $3,000 in excess; of what he should have received for what he had done-under the contract. The contract was never fully completed by Busch, and the actual amount of money which Wilcox had over-paid him was ‘not ascertained definitely until the last of the lumber was shipped, which was in the early part of July, 1885.

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Related

Andreas v. School District No. 4
100 N.W. 1021 (Michigan Supreme Court, 1904)
Busch v. Wilcox
64 N.W. 485 (Michigan Supreme Court, 1895)

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Bluebook (online)
53 N.W. 1051, 94 Mich. 223, 1892 Mich. LEXIS 1107, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/busch-v-jones-mich-1892.