Crate v. Pettepher

87 N.W. 1104, 112 Wis. 252, 1901 Wisc. LEXIS 108
CourtWisconsin Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 29, 1901
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 87 N.W. 1104 (Crate v. Pettepher) 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.

Bluebook
Crate v. Pettepher, 87 N.W. 1104, 112 Wis. 252, 1901 Wisc. LEXIS 108 (Wis. 1901).

Opinion

Marshall, J.

This appeal presents for consideration the following propositions: (1) Assuming that the supplementary return could have been properly considered under any circumstances, was it error to receive it under the peculiar circumstances of this case? (2) Was it proper for the justice to make return of jurisdictional matters other than as the same appeared upon the files and records of his office ? (3) Was the failure of the justice to enter in his docket the nature of plaintiff’s cause of action fatal to his jurisdiction over the subject matter thereof ?

1. The return of a justice of the peace upon appeal may be amended by a supplemental return pursuant to the order of the appellate court, or by the justice’s voluntary act if such court sees fit to receive and consider it. Norden v. Jones, 33 Wis. 600; Moore v. Hansen, 75 Mich. 564; Rudd v. Baker, 7 Johns. 548; 4 Wait, Pr. 448. The assent of the court to a supplementary return is necessary in all cases. It follows that the mere fact that such a return in this case was sent to the circuit court by the justice without any order first obtained, requiring it, did not preclude its reception and consideration. Whether it was proper to permit an amended return under the circumstances is quite another thing.

It sufficiently appears from what has already been said [255]*255that a party to a judgment rendered in justice’s court and appealed from to the circuit court, has no absolute right to an amended return on the appeal. The question is always one addressed to the sound discretion of the court. A party interested, who knows or has good reason to know that a return is defective, and nevertheless causes proceedings to be taken in the action up to a point where a disturbance of further proceedings up to a final determination of the rights of the parties will seriously prejudice his adversary, ought not to be allowed to do so by means of a supplemental return. The rule requiring vigilance in judicial matters applies, and unless a party gives reasonable attention to the essentials for his protection in respect to a return on appeal, and acts with reasonable promptness upon discovering a defect therein, he ought to be bound thereby. 4 Wait, Pr. 444, 445. It follows that an appellate court may be guilty of abuse of discretionary power in ordering or considering such a return. When a return has been made and filed in the clerk’s office, it is the duty of both parties to promptly examine it. . * . If it is found to be defective, the party desiring to have it amended should promptly make a motion for that purpose.” Id. 444. It would be a very dangerous practice to permit a party with knowledge, or reasonable means of knowledge, of all the facts affecting jurisdiction of the appellate court on an appeal from justice’s court, to submit thereto for a considerable length of time upon the theory that he will probably prevail upon the merits, and then, upon appearances changing, defeat the jurisdiction of the court by a supplemental return of the justice. It is not difficult to see that judicial discretion may be abused by allowing that to be done. We will pass from this branch of the case without deciding that there was such abuse in the instance under consideration. However, the mischief that would probably occur if it were understood that a justice’s supplemental return is permissible under all circumstances, [256]*256and that such proceedings as were bad in this case can be wholly sanctioned, seems to require some treatment of the subject, even though we do not decide that reversible error was committed in considering the return. It takes a strong .case to warrant an appellate court in deciding that the court below abused its discretionary power. We stop just short of that here, without determining whether we might go further, the necessities of the case permitting that course.

2. Whether the supplemental return of a justice on appeal, of matters wholly outside the record and the written proceedings kept by him' in the case, is proper, must be tested by sec. 3763, Stats. 1898, which provides that such a return shall consist of the testimony, proceedings, and judgment. That seems plain. It excludes matters resting merely in the memory of tlje justice as clearly as language can do it. That must be so as to jurisdictional matters, or the rule so well understood that the mere mention of it is sufficient, that such matters must appear by the record without the aid of presumptions, would be lost sight of. The justice’s docket entries, as made to appear by the return, must show jurisdiction of the subject matter of the action, or no jurisdiction thereof can be acquired by the appellate court. Witt v. Henze, 58 Wis. 244; Smith v. Bahr, 62 Wis. 244; State ex rel. Ellis v. Thorne, ante, p. 81. True, the court said, in Martin v. Beckwith, 4 Wis. 219, that a justice may certify to a circuit court the evidence taken before him from his minutes-and his best recollection; but that must be read in the light of what the court was speaking about. Care was taken to point out that it did not refer to jurisdictional matters; that the statute does not require the justice to record upon his docket the evidence taken before him; and that the decision, was in harmony with the rule that the jurisdiction of a justice to try a cause must appear by his docket. Counsel cites to our attention Sellers v. Lampman, 63 Wis. 256, where it was said in regard to a situation similar to that presented here:

[257]*257“The justice should be required to certify what amount was proved on the trial to his satisfaction, and the amount it was reduced by credits given, or by the setoff or demand of the defendant.”

The law is so elementary, that evidence of facts cannot be supplied from the memory of the justice to support or defeat jurisdiction, but must be gathered wholly from the record which the law requires to be kept for that purpose, that it cannot be possible that the court intended to say anything out of harmony therewith; The quoted language must be held to mean that, in the particular class of cases under consideration, where the justice’s jurisdiction depends upon the amount of the plaintiff’s account and the balance due him as established to the satisfaction of the justice, the better practice is to make the facts in that regard a part of the docket entries and to certify the same to the circuit court. True, the language of the court would seem to convey the idea which respondent’s counsel contend for and which, evidently, moved them to obtain the supplemental return in question, unless it be read in the light of the situation before the court and the settled law as to how jurisdictional facts must be made to appear by a justice’s return. In any event the language must be restrained to the meaning that, in actions upon accounts, the justice’s return on appeal, of his docket entries, should show the essentials to jurisdiction in that class of cases. The language to the effect that the amount of the plaintiff’s account, as established to the satisfaction of the justice, and the amount of the reduction thereof by offsets or the demand of the defendant, should be made to expressly appear by the justice’s certificate, was advisory, because the statute does not require that such facts should be recorded upon the docket. Probably, if the docket entries required by law, as to the issues to be tried, are made, and the judgment is consistent with the jurisdictional facts as to the amount of the plaintiff’s account established to the [258]

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
87 N.W. 1104, 112 Wis. 252, 1901 Wisc. LEXIS 108, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/crate-v-pettepher-wis-1901.