Jennison v. Haire

29 Mich. 207, 1874 Mich. LEXIS 65
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedApril 21, 1874
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 29 Mich. 207 (Jennison v. Haire) 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
Jennison v. Haire, 29 Mich. 207, 1874 Mich. LEXIS 65 (Mich. 1874).

Opinion

Graves, Oh. J.

Before taking up the points agitated in this case it will be best, perhaps, to bring forward the main events connected with tbe litigation.

Tbe defendants in error prosecuted one Edwin Cole by attachment, and the sheriff, Clark C. Bailey, seized under tbe writ of attachment, as tbe property of Cole, a very large and valuable amount of lumber, timber, teams, vehicles, tools and other chattels.

While tbe sheriff was in possession under the writ of attachment, and before tbe trial, two of tbe plaintiffs in error, namely, Hiram and Luman Jennison, sued out of the circuit court for the county of Ottawa their writ of replevin [209]*209against the sheriff to obtain possession of the same property. This writ was directed to the coroner (Curtis Cray), and was made returnable on the 16th of July, 1867. On giving the writ to the coroner for service, he was furnished with what purported to be the usual replevin bond, executed by the plaintiffs in error. The property taken by the sheriff, and held by him as before stated under the attachment, was by the coroner taken out of his hands on the writ of replevin, and delivered over to the plaintiffs in replevin, in June, 1867.

On the 26th of February, 1868, the plaintiffs in replevin made default, and the court awarded judgment for a return of the property, and for costs, and on the 28th of the same month, being two days later, the defendants in error recovered judgment in the attachment suit against Cole, for damages, eight thousand two hundred and ninety-nine dollars and eighty-eight cents, and costs, forty-nine dollars and thirty-five cents.

On the 4th of February, 1869, an execution was issued on the judgment in replevin, to which the then sheriff (Mr. Weatherwax) made return on the 20th of April, 1869, that he had demanded the goods and chattels of the plaintiffs in replevin, and that they refused to deliver the same or any part thereof. He also returned that he demanded the costs ordered to be collected, and that payment thereof was refused; and further that he levied on goods and chattels, in order to collect such costs, when, on being notified that a writ of error had been taken out and a bond in error given, and that his execution was superseded, he relinquished the levy.

The bond in replevin given to the coroner was thereupon assigned to the defendants in error, the plaintiffs in the attachment suit, and they brought an action upon it in their own names, and obtained judgment on the 8th of July, 1873, for eleven thousand five hundred and thirty-seven dollars and eighty-six cents, and the plaintiffs here (who were the defendants in that suit) then brought error.

[210]*210In proceeding to review the ease we are necessarily confined to the assignments of error, and we cannot follow the. ingenious arguments for the plaintiffs any further than a fair construction of the record will warrant. We can intend nothing against the judgment of the court below, neither can we eke out any suggested ground of error where the ground or point is not properly or sufficiently substantiated or amplified.

The first charge of error rests on a general objection against admitting any evidence, and the objection, as stated to the court below, was based on a general proposition which was claimed to be supported by two defects in the declaration. The proposition was, that the declaration did not set forth a cause of action. But the only specifications of defects were, first, that tbe breaches were not sufficiently set out; and, second, that there was no allegation of the issuing and return of an execution in the replevin suit.

When a defendant claims that a declaration is defective on its face, and still omits to demur and thereby raise the point on the record at a stage and in a form the most favorable to a deliberate and right decision, and lies by while costs accumulate and until the time of the trial, and then springs the question for the first time by an objection to evidence, it is very reasonable to hold him to pretty strict rules, and to require him, in the quaint and expressive language of Lord Hardwick, “to hit the bird in the eye;” and this is especially proper when there is no reason to suppose that the real justice of the case has been overreached.

Now, here there is no assignment that the declaration is bad. The point stands nakedly on an exception to the admission of evidence, and where, too, the objecting party in stating the ground of his objection complained of the ■declaration. The whole, then, rests upon the bill of exceptions, and not at all on the main record. Strike out the bill of exceptions and nothing is left for the assignment of ■error to apply to. As before stated, no error whatever is [211]*211assigned on the main record. Now, a fault in pleading, a demurrable defect in the declaration, is not strictly' and properly a ground of exception at all. Such a fault is required to be assailed in a different way. It should be either by demurrer, motion in arrest of judgment, or by-assignment of error on the main record. — Reynolds v. Lounsbury, 6 Hill, 534; Batchelder v. Batchelder, 2 Allen, 105; Nichols v. Poulson, 6 Ohio, 305.

But suppose this to be otherwise, the point is still open to an unfavorable answer. We are warranted in saying that the first specification or branch of the objection, if it should be admitted that an insufficient setting out of breaches would be a ground for excluding all evidence, was quite too indefinite. It presented to the mind of the court no distinct matter to be passed upon, and, in view of the circumstances, was very little, if any, better than no explanation at all; and the point does not appear to us to call for indulgent treatment. — Johnson v. Provincial Ins. Co., 12 Mich., 216; Bain v. Proprietors of White Haven & F. J. R. W. Co., 3 H. L., 1, 15, 16; Camden v. Doremus, 3 How., 515; Russell v. Branham, 8 Blackf., 277; Atkins v. Elwell, 45 N. Y., 753; Howard v. Hayward, 10 Met., 408; Waters v. Gilbert, 2 Cush., 27; Wentworth v. Leonard, 4 Cush., 414; Edwards v. Carr, 13 Gray, 234; Cayuga Co. Bk. v. Warden, 6 N. Y., 19, 30; Levin v. Russell, 42 N. Y, 251; McKeon v. See, 51 N. Y., 300.

Upon the second specification or ground of objection, it is enough to say that the precedents and authorities appear to justify what was done here. The New York courts, in passing on this statute (from whence we copied very much of ours), have held it unnecessary to aver the issuing aud return of the writ; and we see no reason for introducing greater nicety than has prevailed there. — Cowden v. Pease, 10 Wend., 334; Cowdin v. Stanton, 12 Wend., 120; Shaw v. Tobias, 3 Comst., 188; Burrill’s App., p. 275.

The second and third assignments of error complain of the admission of evidence to establish the execution of the [212]*212bond; and the fourth objects to the introduction of the-bond itself under the proof made of its execution.

There was no affidavit denying the execution, and. we think the rule of court plainly applied. The declaration expressly counted on the bond, and by omitting to question its execution by affidavit, the defendants admitted it, and by so much narrowed the issue. — People v. Johr, 22 Mich., 461.

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Bluebook (online)
29 Mich. 207, 1874 Mich. LEXIS 65, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jennison-v-haire-mich-1874.