Durand v. Gage

43 N.W. 583, 76 Mich. 624
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 18, 1889
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 43 N.W. 583 (Durand v. Gage) 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
Durand v. Gage, 43 N.W. 583, 76 Mich. 624 (Mich. 1889).

Opinion

Morse, J.

Application for mandamus.

December 25, 1885, William Lloyd died intestate. January 23, 1886, Lorenzo T. Durand was appointed his administrator.

On the same day William E. Kendrick and Isaac Delano were appointed commissioners on claims against the estate, and afterwards qualified. Marshall G-. Smith filed a claim against Lloyd’s estate, consisting of three items. August 25, 1886, the commissioners reported, rejecting two of the items, and disagreeing upon the other; Delano finding against the whole claim.

October 5, 1886, Smith petitioned the probate court for Saginaw county for the appointment of a third commissioner to act with Kendrick and Delano, for a revival of the commission, and a rehearing of Smith’s claim. The petition was granted, without notice to the administrator, and Archibald Brown appointed such commissioner.

These commissioners again met in December, 1886, and the administrator appeared before them, and objected to their jurisdiction-for two reasons:

1. Because of the want of notice to him of the application for and the appointment of the third commissioner.

2. Because of the steps taken by Smith to appeal from the report of the two commissioners.”

It appears that on the twenty-third day of October, 1886, and within the time allowed by statute, Smith had filed hie application for appeal in the probate court, and filed his bond [626]*626on appeal. An order was made by said court allowing the appeal, and the required notice was duly served upon the administrator. The administrator claimed that an appeal had been taken, and the claimant answered that certified copies of the report of the commissioners, and the order allowing the appeal, had not yet been filed in the circuit court, and that therefore jurisdiction of the claim was still in the probate court, and the commissioners were authorize'’ in law to act upon it.

A majority of the commissioners decided to hear the case, and in May, 1887, allowed Smith’s claim at the sum of $533.20.

The administrator thereupon appealed to the circuit court.

March 8, 1888, this appeal was tried in the circuit. Smith prevailed, and his claim was fixed at the sum of $524.11.

The case came to this Court, and was decided October 12, 1888. It was held here that the whole action of the three commissioners was void. It was claimed upon the argument that the item of the claim upon which Smith prevailed in the probate and circuit courts was already pending in the circuit court of Saginaw county upon the appeal first made, which had not been abandoned. This claim was made by the counsel for the administrator. We held that the disagreement of the commissioners upon this item was a virtual finding against it, and that an appeal would lie therefrom, although we did not undertake to decide upon the validity or standing of the appeal that had been taken, and was then apparently pending. See Smith v. Lloyd Estate, 76 Mich. 619 (39 N. W. Rep. 756).

After the filing of the above-named opinion, and on the seventeenth day of November, 1888, Smith filed in the circuit court for the county of Saginaw a certified copy of the report of the first commission, and of his application for leave to appeal, and of the order allowing the same, and on [627]*627“the nineteenth day of the same month served upon the administrator the following notice:

“Marshall G-. Smith
vs.
“ The Estate or William:
Lloyd, Deceased.
“ You are hereby notified that certified copies of records, reports, files, and papers required to be filed in the circuit court to perfect an appeal from the decision of the first commissioners in this cause have this day been filed in the office of the clerk of the circuit court, and said cause is now ready for trial on appeal from first commissioners.
“ Camp & Brooks,
“ Plaintiff’s Attorneys.
“Nov. 19, 1888.”

November 30, 1888, Durand & Brewer, attorneys for the estate, moved the dismissal of the appeal upon four grounds, to wit:

1. The certified copy of the record of the allowance or dis-allowance appealed from, and other papers necessary to be filed on such appeal, were not filed the next term of the court after said appeal.

2. Said appeal had been waived or abandoned by Smith, and said appeal dismissed, on his motion, before the filing of said appeal papers in said circuit court.

3. Said Smith has been guilty of inexcusable laches in entering his said appeal, and filing said appeal papers, in the circuit court, and has failed to prosecute such appeal as required by law.

4. The circuit court has acquired no jurisdiction to entertain said appeal.

Upon hearing this motion, the circuit judge refused to dismiss the appeal.

This Court is now asked to issue its writ of mandamus requiring the circuit court of Saginaw county to vacate its order denying said motion to dismiss the appeal, and to enter an order that said appeal be dismissed, and that the claim of aaid Smith be forever barred against said Lloyd’s estate.

[628]*628It will be seen from the foregoing statement of the facts regarding the litigation between Smith and the estate of. Lloyd that the claimant has as yet had no opportunity of trying said claim upon its merits except before the first commissioners, as the proceedings taken before the last commission, and afterwards in the circuit court, where Smith prevailed, have been declared by this Court to be null and void because of want of authority to appoint said commission. If the prayer of the relators be granted, and the writ issues, the claim of Smith is forever barred, without his having an opportunity to establish it.

We do- not think the third ground — that of laches upon the part of Smith — is tenable. He may well be .excused from pushing this appeal while the' second one was in progress and being litigated; and the fact that he prevailed both in the probate and circuit courts upon his idea that it was-proper to re-open the commission, and appoint a third commissioner to sit with the others upon the item as to which the first commission disagreed, shows that his error as to the law was not an inexcusable one.

Nor do we understand that he ever abandoned his first appeal. His claim in the circuit court was that the appeal had not yet reached the circuit court, because the proper papers showing jurisdiction in that court had not yet been filed therein; and such was the judgment of the circuit court in passing upon the motion to dismiss the second appeal, because of the pendency of the first one.

We held in Smith v. Lloyd Estate, 76 Mich. 619, that the court below was wrong in this holding, and that by taking his first appeal Smith waived any right to ask a new appointment of a commission. To turn around now, and hold that by the taking of the second appeal, which we have held ho had no right to take, he has waived and abandoned his first appeal, would deprive him of all opportunity to press his claim against the estate, and also be not only a failure, but a. [629]*629'deprivation, of justice. The writ of

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Bluebook (online)
43 N.W. 583, 76 Mich. 624, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/durand-v-gage-mich-1889.