Hudson v. Smith

9 Wis. 122
CourtWisconsin Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 19, 1859
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 9 Wis. 122 (Hudson v. Smith) 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
Hudson v. Smith, 9 Wis. 122 (Wis. 1859).

Opinion

By the Oourt,

Paine, J.

This suit was brought by the plain-tiifs below to recover of the defendants below, possession of the gas works in the city of Janesville, for alleged frauds, &c. Various proceedings were had. The case was removed to Dane county, and on application an order was made by the judge of the circuit court, that a receiver be appointed, and it was referred to himself, at Rock county, whither he was about to go, to appoint the receiver, &c. From this order an appeal was immediately taken and perfected; the appellants giving the undertaking required by § 15, chap. 139, R. S., 1858, in the sum of two hundred and fifty dollars.

The judge, however, proceeded under the order to the appointment of the receiver, when an application ivas made to him by the appellants to fix the sum in which an undertaking should be executed in order to stay proceedings under the provisions of § 2, chap. 139, of the laws of 1859. This he refused to do; holding that this section was intended to apply only to actions brought for the recovery of money.

The appellants then moved this court to compel the circuit [124]*124judge by mandamus to fix the amount of such an undertaking; or to make an order itself, staying the proceedings, offering at the same time to give bond in such sum and with such condition, as this court should direct; and without deciding whether the appellants were entitled to a stay under the provisions of the act of 1859, before referred to, we granted an order staying proceedings on the appellants filing an undertaking in the sum of ten thousand dollars, conditioned to pay and abide by any judgment that might be finally rendered in the suit. f

This order was granted on an ex parte application, and the defendants then moved to vacate it, which motion was argued at length by counsel on both sides. Several questions were discussed, among which were the following: 1. Whether the appellants were entitled to a stay of proceedings under the act of 1859. 2. Whether, .if not, the perfecting of the appeal itself worked a stay; and, lastly, if it depended entirely on the general power of this court to stay proceedings in any matter appealed to it, which power was conceded, whether the court ought in this case to continue the order in force ; and we think if it turned entirely upon the last question, that we ought not to vacate the order. For it is undoubtedly the general policy of the law to allow any party against whom judicial proceedings are commenced to stay proceedings under the decision of any inferior tribunal against him, from which he has appealed, on giving just and adequate security.

It is usual therefore for the legislature in providing for an ■appeal, either to provide that giving security shall be a necessary step to perfect it, and shall stay proceedings, or, if the appeal is allowed to be perfected without the security, to make express provision that a stay may be had by giving security. And in this case, if there is no law entitling the party to a stay of proceedings in any event, on an order appointing a receiver of his property from which he has [125]*125appealed, it would seem to be an omission entirely inconsistent with the general spirit of the provisions of the law on this subject; and, so regarding it, we should be inclined to allow a stay of proceedings, without inquiring into the case further than to determine what security, if any, should be given, and it is not claimed here that the security which has been given is not entirely adequate. We might therefore rest our decision overruling the motion on this ground alone.

But as the other questions have been discussed and are fairly presented by the motion, and as they involve a matter of practice that ought to be settled, we will proceed to determine them. And in the first place it is obvious that the question, whether the act of 1859 is applicable to an appeal like this, will very materially depend upon the decision of the other, which is, whether or not an appeal perfected according to law stays proceedings on the order or judgment appealed from, in the absence of any statutory provisions as to its effect. For it was urged upon the argument that this statute did not apply, because it only required security for the payment of any judgment that might be rendered; and it was said that where the principal relief sought by the action did not consist in the payment of money, that such security would be entirely inadequate, and therefore it ought not to be presumed that the legislature intended the act to apply to such cases. But the force of this argument depends entirely on the assumption that in the absence of any statutory provision, the appeal itself would not work a stay of proceedings.

We will therefore first consider the effect of the appeal, on the supposition that there was no statute prescribing what its effect should be, and, so far as it depends on authority, a decision either way might be supported by a very respectable list The history of the law upon this subject is very fully stated by the chancellor in Hart vs. The Mayor, &c., of Al[126]*126bany, 3 Paige 381. From this it appears that the House of Lords, during its struggle with the English court of chancery for its appellate jurisdiction, held the law to be that an appeal to the Lords suspended all proceedings in the court below. Afterwards the doctrine was modified by Lord Apsley, so that it was held to stay proceedings only as to the matter appealed from. And this was the law prevailing in England at the time of the separation between that country and the colonies. Afterwards, the jurisdiction of the House of Lords having been acquiesced in, they changed their rule and provided that an appeal should not stay proceedings without an express order of the chancellor. But the courts of New York followed the law as settled at the time of the separation between the two countries, and held that an appeal did, per se, stay proceedings in the first instance, but that an order might be obtained for leave to proceed notwithstanding the appeal. So that the decisions of the courts of that state, as to the point now under consideration, sustain the position that the appeal here would of its own force have worked a stay.

In Massachusetts, under a statute providing that on an appeal from a decree of the probate court all proceedings should cease in the court below, it was held that the decree was vacated by the appeal, and could not be held in force, even though the appeal was never entered or prosecuted, Paine vs. Cowdin, 17 Pick., 142; Davis vs. Cowdin. 20 Pick., 510.

So an appeal has the same effect in admiralty. In Yeaton vs. The United States, 5 Cranch., 281, Chief Justice Marshall says : The majority of the court is clearly of opinion that in admiralty cases an appeal suspends the sentence altogether; and that it is not res adjudicata until the final sentence of the appellate court is pronounced.”

In Wade vs. The Colonization Society, 4 Smedes & Mar., 671, under a statute providing that before granting an appeal [127]*127the chancellor should require a bond with security to pay or perform the decree or order, &c., the court held that where the statute was complied with, the appeal would by its own force suspend the decree, though there was nothing in the act saying it should have that effect.

In Helm vs. Boone & Talbot, 6 J. J.

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Bluebook (online)
9 Wis. 122, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hudson-v-smith-wis-1859.