Fort Street Union Depot Co. v. Backus

52 N.W. 790, 92 Mich. 33, 1892 Mich. LEXIS 829
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedJune 10, 1892
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 52 N.W. 790 (Fort Street Union Depot Co. v. Backus) 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
Fort Street Union Depot Co. v. Backus, 52 N.W. 790, 92 Mich. 33, 1892 Mich. LEXIS 829 (Mich. 1892).

Opinions

Long, J.

This cause was before this Court at the October term, 1891, and an opinion filed December 21, which is reported in 89 Mich. 209.

That proceeding was for mandamus to compel the court below to set aside the order made by it granting a new trial, and to compel that court to confirm the award made by the jury. The case is entitled “Backus v. Gartner, Circuit Judge.”

It appeared in that proceeding that a motion was made in that court by the petitioner in the present case to vacate and set aside the verdict of the jury. The circuit court set the verdict and award of the jury aside, and the mandamus was asked by the respondents to vacate that order, and to confirm the verdict. This writ was granted by this Court, and an order confirming the verdict and award by the jury entered in the court below. Twenty-three specific reasons were urged before the court below why this motion for a new trial should be granted, and those'reasons are substantially set out in the opinion by this Court in that case, and need not be restated here, as those reasons, with others now set out in this appeal,1 are the objections to the proceedings upon which we are now asked to pass. In addition to the objections then made to the verdict and order of confirmation, objections Nos. 24 to 28, inclusive, are now added, as follows:

24’. The Supreme Court erred in granting a writ of [36]*36mandamus in this case, having misapprehended and misunderstood the facts of the case and the law applicable thereto, and deprived the circuit courts of this State of a wise and wholesome power of jurisdiction vested in them by the Constitution and laws of this State.
25. Said wi’it of mandamus was improvidently granted.
26. To confirm said verdict against the deliberate judgment of the circuit court for the county of Wayne is in and by itself a violation of the Constitution and laws of this State.
27. During the trial before the said jury one of the stockholders of A. Backusi Jr., & Sons, knowingly, willfully, and corruptly paid to one of the jurors the sum of $130, for the pui'pose and with the intent of corruptly influencing him as a juror in said case. Said payment was made under the pretense that said stockholder was indebted to said juror.in said amount, whereas in txmth and in fact the indebtedness paid was the debt of another, and not a debt upon which said stockholder was liable, and was one upon which he had previously denied liability and refused to pay.
28. The circuit court eri’ed in disregai’ding and ovexruling the above objections, and in entering an order confirming said award.

The only point decided in the mandamus case was whether, under the statute, the circuit court has authority to set aside the award and report of the jury, and to order a new trial or inquisition before a new jury, where the objections to the confirmation of the report are not based upon jurisdictional defects. The decision turned upon the construction of section 10, chap. 93, How. Stat. The language of this section is:

“On such report being made by the commissionex’s or jury, the court, on motion, shall confirm the same on the next or any subsequent day when in session, unless for good cause shown by either party. * * * Said court, as to the confirmation of such report, shall have the powex's usual in other cases.”

This Court gave construction to the language of that section, and held that—

“There is nothing in this section which states that [37]*37the court shall have power to set aside the panel of jurors or commissioners appointed by the court, and direct that proceedings de novo shall be had upon the petition; and that the term “powers usual in other cases” refers to “ the powers of courts in the confirmation of reports made to such courts by some bodies or persons authorized by law to make them, in accordance with the known practice of the court.”

We need not refer here to the reasons given by this Court for that ruling, as they are fully set out in the former opinion, to which reference is made.

We permitted, in the present appeal, a reargument of that question, for the reason that, should we find we were then in error, neither party will have lost any substantial right, as all the questions then presented are now before us for review, and this Court, under the statute, possesses ample power to correct any errors which may be found in the record and -proceedings. The motion for mandamus was argued before us at the October term last, and such consideration was not given it then as the interests now involved' in the controversy demand. We have now listened to- a reargument of the question then passed upon, and our attention has been called to several decisions, from which we conclude that -the powers of the circuit courts in this class of cases were too much restricted by the former opinion.

Section 10 of the act under which the preceedings were .had provides that, the report of the jury being made, the court, on motion, shall confirm the same, unless for good cause shown by either party. The ■statute does not point out for what particular cause or causes -the court may refuse to confirm the award. While the jury, in such cases, are judges of the law and fact, yet, if it be made to appear to the court before confirmation of the award that the jury have based their verdict and award upon false principles, and substantial [38]*38justice has not been done in the premises, the court ought to refuse to confirm the findings. Toledo, etc., Ry. Co. v. Dunlap, 47 Mich. 466.

This question has been settled by this Court by former adjudications, which were overlooked in the mandamus case.

In Marquette, etc., R. R. Co. v. Probate Judge, 53 Mich. 317, commissioners were appointed to condemn certain lands for railroad purposes. They made their report, and filed it in the probate court. The petitioner filed a motion in that court to set aside the finding and report of the commissioners for the reasons:

1. That the damages and compensation were excessive and exorbitant.
3. That the commissioners included in the compensation a large amount of money for loss of profits in the-fuse business during the interruption of the same, and for loss of wages while the factory should be stopped, and for loss of business to arise from the removal of the factory to another site, without any evidence on which to found the same.
3. That they allowed a sum of money to one of the-owners of the property for the cost of removing therefrom.
4. That they grossly overestimated the value of the land, and the structures thereon.
5. That they allowed greater damages for the real estate than its whole value.
6. That they overestimated the value of the garden, trees, and shrubs.
7.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
52 N.W. 790, 92 Mich. 33, 1892 Mich. LEXIS 829, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fort-street-union-depot-co-v-backus-mich-1892.