Holmes v. Horger

56 N.W. 3, 96 Mich. 408, 1893 Mich. LEXIS 780
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 25, 1893
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 56 N.W. 3 (Holmes v. Horger) 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
Holmes v. Horger, 56 N.W. 3, 96 Mich. 408, 1893 Mich. LEXIS 780 (Mich. 1893).

Opinion

Long, J.

This is an action for malicious prosecution, [409]*409and on the trial in the court below plaintiff had verdict and judgment for $150.

The facts may be briefly stated: Plaintiff and defendant are both residents of the township of Springwells, "Wayne county, and are near neighbors. They were born and reared in the same neighborhood, went to the same school, and, up to the fall of 1891, were always friends. In the spring of that year, defendant was elected overseer of highways, and had in his possession a road scraper belonging to his district. In November the plaintiff, who was working for his father, took his team, drove to defendant’s place, entered his yard, and inquired of defendant’s men where the scraper was, and, in plain view of the defendant, hitched to it, and drove away, to use it upon the highway. He used it for one or two weeks, when defendant told plaintiff’s father that the scraper must be returned, or there would be trouble. On the same day defendant ordered the scraper returned he visited a justice of the peace, and told him what the plaintiff had done, and wanted a warrant for larceny of the scraper. The justice remonstrated with him, and suggested some other course to get it back. He returned the next day to the justice’s office, made a complaint in writing against the plaintiff for larceny, setting forth in the complaint the value of the scraper at §49. The warrant was issued by the justice, and the plaintiff was arrested. The justice’s docket shows that, upon the plaintiff’s being brought before him, he found plaintiff guilty upon his plea, and suspended sentence. The plaintiff appealed the case to the circuit court, where he was discharged by order, of the court, on the ground that the justice had no jurisdiction to try the cause. After the trial of the present case had been commenced, it was ascertained by counsel for plaintiff that the judgment in the case of the people against plaintiff had never been entered in the circuit. Plaintiff, by his counsel, [410]*410appeared in the circuit court in that cause, and moved the court for entry of the judgment discharging plaintiff nunc pro tunc. This motion was granted, and the judgment of discharge entered as of February 8, 1892, that date being prior to the time of the commencement of the present suit. On the trial plaintiff offered this judgment entry in evidence, for the purpose of showing his discharge under the criminal prosecution before the commencement of this suit. This was objected to, on the ground that it did not establish the fact of the discharge from arrest prior to the beginning of the action.

It is a general rule that a conviction before a justice of the peace is a bar to an action for malicious prosecution, and, if the party bringing the action relies upon an exception to it, he must allege the facts which create the exception, and prove them, or the conviction will be conclusive of probable cause. Phillips v. Village of Kalamazoo, 53 Mich. 33. It appeared upon the face of the complaint and warrant before the justice, however, that the justice had no jurisdiction to try the cause set out in the. complaint, as the value of the property was alleged at a sum exceeding $25, and the circuit court very properly ordered the discharge from the facts appearing on the face of the papers. The plaintiff, after appealing his case to the circuit, appeared therein, and was actually discharged by the court, but the clerk failed to enter the judgment of discharge of record. The question is therefore presented whether the judgment of discharge entered nunc pro tunc is evidence of the actual termination of the criminal prosecution before commencement of suit. Counsel for defendant contends that the judgment so entered is not evidence of ‘this fact, and cites Whitwell v. Emory, 3 Mich. 84. That was an action of ejectment. To rebut the plaintiffs’' case, the defendant attempted to show title in himself, acquired under a judgment and execution against Reuben [411]*411Abbott, the common source. To prove the judgment, be introduced a journal entry of the same court, which entry was originally in form as follows:

“December 6, 1841.
“ On hearing counsel in this cause, on motion of George Woodruff, plaintiffs5 attorney, judgment for plaintiffs on demurrer, and that it be referred to the clerk to compute the amount due on the bond mentioned in the plaintiffs5 declaration, and the clerk having computed the amount due on said bond at $800, the penalty thereof, to be discharged on the payment of $624.11, and costs to be taxed.55

By virtue of this entry, and the proceedings thereunder, defendant claimed title to the land in question. This entry remained on the journal without amendment, no steps being taken respecting it, until after the commencment of the ejectment suit, and up to the day of the trial thereof, June 19, 1851, when, upon ex parte application of the defendant, an order was made for the amendment of the foregoing entry by the insertion between the words “at55 and “$800 55 of the words “$624.11, ordered final judgment for.55 To the admission of the entry plaintiffs5 counsel objected, and the same was received in evidence subject to the objection. It was said by this Court:

“To the admission of the journal entry of December 6, 1841, and the amendment made June 19, 1851, the plaintiffs5 counsel objected. * * * Before this amendment was made, there was clearly no final judgment entered in the cause. * * * From the subsequent action of the court, it would seem that the omission was thought to embrace the assessment of the amount due upon the bond, and that which it was conceived went to constitute a judgment, viz., the words c ordered final judgment for,5 and without which there was no evidence of an adjudication by the court. * * * The entry, with the amendment, then, comes far short of evidence of a judgment, but is rather in the form and nature of an interlocutory order or a common rule, which, by some accident, had found its way into the journal of the court.
“But the amendment was void because without the jurisdiction of the court. At the common law, while the [412]*412proceedings are in paper an amendment can be allowed, or a judgment could be set aside before the adjournment of the term at which it was rendered; but at a subsequent term the court had no power to change the record of a previous term. By various statutes, both in England and this country, power is given to courts to amend in many cases, which they could not exercise at common law. Under our statute the court may, at the time, amend clerical errors; but that which enters into the consideration of the court, and constitutes a part of the judgment, cannot be changed after the term. Much less has a court power, under the form of an amendment, to render a judgment.”

It was further said by the Court in that case that, were this error susceptible of correction by amendment, it would be necessary that the parties to be affected by it be cited before the court, especially where the matter had slept for 10 years, as any other course might work irreparable mischief to parties wholly unconscious of their situation, and jeopardize rights fairly and honestly acquired; and that, before any judgment could be perfected in the cause, it was certainly necessary that the parties to be affected should have an opportunity to be heard.

Our attention has also been called to Ninde v. Clark, 63 Mich. 134. That was an action of ejectment also.

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Bluebook (online)
56 N.W. 3, 96 Mich. 408, 1893 Mich. LEXIS 780, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/holmes-v-horger-mich-1893.