Felt v. Amidon

3 N.W. 825, 48 Wis. 66, 1879 Wisc. LEXIS 202
CourtWisconsin Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 16, 1879
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 3 N.W. 825 (Felt v. Amidon) 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
Felt v. Amidon, 3 N.W. 825, 48 Wis. 66, 1879 Wisc. LEXIS 202 (Wis. 1879).

Opinion

Tayloe, J.

This is an appeal from an order of the circuit court staying proceedings on the part of the plaintiff and appellant until.he pays the costs awarded to the respondents by this court upon the reversal of the judgment recovered against them in this action. It is insisted by the learned counsel for the respondents, that the order is not appealable under the statute.

The right to appeal from an order of the circuit court to this court is given and limited by section 3069, E. S. 1878, which section is substantially section 10, ch. 264, Laws of 1860, 2 Tay. Stats., 1635.

If this order he appealable at all- under the provisions of said section, it must be under the first subdivision, which reads as follows: “An order affecting a substantial right in any action, when such order in effect determines the action, and prevents a. judgment from which an appeal might be taken.”

It is insisted by the learned counsel for the appellant, that the order appealed from comes within the spirit, if not within the letter, of this provision, and that the order does in effect determine the action, and prevents a judgment. It is possible that the order may have that effect, but it does not by its terms. The stay is only granted until the plaintiff shall pay a certain amount of costs due to the respondent. If the money be paid, the stay of the plaintiff’s proceedings ceases, and he may then proceed to judgment. We think this section refers to such orders, and such only, as by their very nattire determine the. action or prevent a judgment; and does not cover orders which simply stay the proceedings of the plaintiff until he shall perform some act or pay a sum of money. An order which stayed proceedings until an act should be per[70]*70formed which it was impossible to perform, or which required the performance of an unlawful act, might be construed to be an order which determined the action or prevented a judgment, and as therefore within the provision above quoted, and appealable; but when an order stays proceedings until an act shall be performed which is not illegal, and which is such as can ordinarily be performed, such stay cannot be said to determine the action or prevent a judgment.

An order staying proceedings in an action, not amounting to a perpetual stay, is generally within the discretion of the court in which the action is pending; and, when granted for a cause which is a good ground for a stay, in the discretion of the court granting it, such order is not appealable. This court has so held in the following cases: Johnston, Ex’r, v. Reiley, 24 Wis., 494; Parmalee v. Wheeler, 32 Wis., 429; Noble v. Strachan, id., 314; McLeod v. Bertschy, 30 Wis., 324; In re the Will of Kneeland, 40 Wis., 344; McDonald v. The Green Bay & Miss. Canal Co., 42 Wis., 335; Blesch v. Railroad Co., 44 Wis., 593, 595. These cases seem to have settled this question. But it is insisted that if the facts upon which the order staying proceedings is based are such that it is evident that the court granting the stay had no right to grant the same, or that the granting of the same was an abuse of discretion, then this court ought to take jurisdiction, upon appeal from such order, and reverse the same. This does not seem to have been the view taken by this court in the cases above cited.

It seems that the proper method to be pursued, in the first instance, by the party complaining of the stay, when he deems the stay unreasonable, is to move the court granting the same either to vacate or modify the same. Tf, upon such motion, the court should arbitrarily or unreasonably refuse to modify or vacate the order, some of the cases above cited intimate that an appeal from such last order would be sustained, probably upon' the ground that such order would in[71]*71volve tbe merits of the action, or some part thereof, within the meaning of subdivision 4 of said section 3069. Such appears to have been the opinion of Justice Lyoít, as intimated in Noble v. Stmohan, supra. In the case of In re the Kneeland Will, supra, Justice Cole strongly intimates that the remedy in such case would be by mandamus. "Without determining what would be the proper remedy of the person prejudiced by an arbitrary and unjust refusal to vacate an order staying proceedings unreasonably, we are satisfied that such order, made in the first instance upon facts which call for the exercise of the discretion of the court below, is not ap-pealable.

We might rest this case here; but, as the learned counsel for the appellant insists that the circuit court exceeded its powers in granting the stay in this case, we will.briefly examine that question. Had the court the right to stay plaintiff’s proceedings until the costs of the appeal in the action. were paid ? There being no law of this state forbidding the granting of such stay, we think the court had the right to make the order in its discretion, upon the facts appearing on the motion. If, after an honest effort on the part of the appellant to comply with the order, it should be made to appear to the court below that it was impossible for him to comply therewith, on account of his poverty and inability to induce any one to advance the money to pay such costs, and if the court should refuse to modify or vacate such order, it might present the question whether the court had abused its discretion in continuing the order. Whether absolute inability, on account of poverty and want of credit, to pay the costs, is in any case a full defense to an application to stay proceedings in his action until the same are paid, it is unnecessary to decide in this case, as the evidence upon which the order was made does not establish that fact. Even in such case we think the court would be justified in granting the order, if it appeared that the prosecution was vexatious or without merits; and in a case where it [72]*72satisfactorily appeared that the plaintiff had a good cause of action, and was prosecuting it in good faith, it U hardly to be anticipated that the court would prohibit his prosecution thereof permanently, by requiring him to pay costs which it was impossible for him to pay.

Poverty alone is not a sufficient reason for requiring a plaintiff to give security for costs. Watson v. Fraser, 10 L. J., 1841, Exch., 420; Yarworth v. Mitchel, 2 Dow. & Ryl., 423; 1 Marshall’s Reports, 4; Senter v. Carr, 15 N. H., 375. While poverty alone should not be a sufficient cause for granting a stay of proceedings until costs accrued and due to the opposite party are paid, neither is it a good defense to an application to stay proceedings until costs incurred have been paid, when it appears that the prosecution is vexatious or not carried on in good faith.

It was held in the court of King’s Bench in England, that a plaintiff who was prosecuting an action in forma pcmperis should have his proceedings stayed until he paid the costs of a former action between the same parties for the same cause, in which he had been nonsuited. Weston v. Withers, 2 Term R., 511, and cases, decided in 1788; Haigh v. Paris, 16 L. J., 1847, Exch., 37, decided in 1846.

It is almost a universal rule, that, when a plaintiff has been nonsuited in an action, he will not be permitted to proceed in another action against the same parties for the same cause un - til he has paid the costs of the former action.

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Bluebook (online)
3 N.W. 825, 48 Wis. 66, 1879 Wisc. LEXIS 202, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/felt-v-amidon-wis-1879.