Erie Preserving Co. v. Witherspoon

13 N.W. 781, 49 Mich. 377, 1882 Mich. LEXIS 579
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 31, 1882
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 13 N.W. 781 (Erie Preserving Co. v. Witherspoon) 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
Erie Preserving Co. v. Witherspoon, 13 N.W. 781, 49 Mich. 377, 1882 Mich. LEXIS 579 (Mich. 1882).

Opinion

Cooley, J.

The error assigned on the alleged illegal adjournment of the cause in justice’s court finds nothing to support it in the record. It does not affirmatively appear that any objection was made before judgment, and the record shows a subsequent trial and submission of the cause on the merits. If the objection was not taken before the trial was entered upon, it would be unavailable afterwards,

j The defendants, when the cause came on for trial, presented a plea puis darrein that the property which they : were charged with having converted had been taken from them on a writ of attachment against the plaintiff. The plea did not aver that any disposition had been made of the attachment suit, or that the property had been applied to the plaintiffs’ use. When the defendants offered the attachment proceedings in evidence, the justice excluded them; and this is complained of as error. But the ruling was iplainly right. If the defendants had already been guilty of ja conversion, the subsequent seizure of the property by a [379]*379third person would not excuse their tort, and if they had not been, the attachment was an immaterial fact. The subsequent appropriation of the property to the use of the plaintiff might under some circumstances go in mitigation •of damages; but nothing of the sort was set up by the plea ■or was pretended.

Of the fifteen errors assigned in the affidavit for certiorari, fourteen relate to the rulings of the justice on the admission of evidence. In nearly every case the point made is somewhat nice and there is no reason to doubt that the justice decided according to his best judgment. We do not discover that any evidence was excluded which could have aided the defendants, or any received that was clearly improper. It is probable that on some points the case was not very completely made out, but none of the objections taken were such as would necessarily defeat the plaintiff’s recovery, though if sustained, some of them might have rendered further proofs essential.

Where the alleged errors of the justice go to the foundation of the action, it is proper to review them on certiorari j but where they occur in the course of the trial, and are of such a nature that they might be obviated on a new trial, a new trial is obviously the proper remedy. The writ of certiorari is not given to enable parties to have a technical review of all the justice’s rulings, hut to afford a speedy and inexpensive remedy for substantial faults; and where the case is one to be determined on disputed facts, the party dissatisfied with the judgment should remove it to the circuit court for trial on the facts, instead of seeking a reversal on technical grounds without an investigation of the merits. Ritter v. Daniels 47 Mich. 617. It is not the policy of the law to encourage a choice of remedies that tends to multiply litigation, and to make judgments depend upon something •else than a consideration of the real merits in controversy.

We think the circuit court should not have reversed the justice’s judgment, and its judgment must be set aside and that of the justice affirmed.

The other Justices concurred.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

People v. Proteau
297 N.W. 485 (Michigan Supreme Court, 1941)
Foster v. Watson
117 N.W. 197 (Michigan Supreme Court, 1908)
Bullock v. Ueberroth
80 N.W. 39 (Michigan Supreme Court, 1899)
Forbes Lithograph Manufacturing Co. v. Winter
64 N.W. 1053 (Michigan Supreme Court, 1895)
Ramsey v. Pettengill
12 P. 439 (Oregon Supreme Court, 1886)
Mann v. Tyler
23 N.W. 314 (Michigan Supreme Court, 1885)
Gray v. Willcox
22 N.W. 109 (Michigan Supreme Court, 1885)
Galloway v. Corbitt
18 N.W. 218 (Michigan Supreme Court, 1884)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
13 N.W. 781, 49 Mich. 377, 1882 Mich. LEXIS 579, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/erie-preserving-co-v-witherspoon-mich-1882.