Knack v. Wayne Circuit Judge

111 N.W. 161, 147 Mich. 485, 1907 Mich. LEXIS 941
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 12, 1907
DocketCalendar No. 22,042
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 111 N.W. 161 (Knack v. Wayne Circuit Judge) 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
Knack v. Wayne Circuit Judge, 111 N.W. 161, 147 Mich. 485, 1907 Mich. LEXIS 941 (Mich. 1907).

Opinions

Hooker, J.

This cause originated in justice’s court, where a judgment was rendered for the plaintiff. The defendant removed the cause by certiorari to the circuit court, and the same was heard before Judge Frazer, who took it under advisement. He prepared and signed an opinion deciding the points raised in detail, and concluding with the following statement:

“ I think this covers all the objections made,'and as, in my opinion, they are none of them well taken, the writ of certiorari may be dismissed.”

This writing was dated December 7, 1905, and bears the filing of the clerk of that date. Judge Frazer’s term of office ended December 31, 1905. An application was afterwards made, asking that judgment be rendered affirming the judgment of the court below, and that the plaintiff recover against the defendant and the surety upon his bond in certiorari the sum of $108.75, being the amount of his damages and costs recovered in the justice’s court, and interest thereon from the date thereof, amounting to $9.97, together with his costs and charges, etc. This application was heard and denied, whereupon an application for a mandamus to require the entry of such judgment was filed in this court, and an order to show cause was issued. The return shows the foregoing facts.

The following is a summary of the reasons given in the return for the denial of judgment:

1. Because there was no evidence in the record of a legal determination by Judge Frazer during his term of office upon the matters involved in the cause; there being no entry in the short book to show that any order or judgment was rendered by Judge Frazer during his term of office.

2. Because, in any event, the determination of Judge Frazer, if it can be called a decision or judgment, extended no further than permitting a dismissal of the writ of certiorari, while the judgment moved for differed from that rendered in the justice’s court, in the following particulars : (a) It was for a different and larger sum. (6) [488]*488It was a judgment against the surety in the bond as well as the defendant, (c) It was a judgment including an amount for interest.

It has been customary for judges to hear in open court and take under advisement questions of fact and of law, and to file decisions in writing during vacation, or in term without oral announcement, with the clerks of their respective courts, and it has been a common practice for the clerks to enter judgment in the journal in accordance with such findings or determinations. 3 Comp. Laws, § 10297, provides that after verdict judgment shall he rendered upon the matter found by the verdict. In some circuits the practice has prevailed of deferring the entry until a formal motion for judgment should be made and granted in open court, but that practice has generally given way to the custom, on the part of the clerks, of entering judgment immediately, or after a limited time, within which a motion to set aside a verdict might be made.

As the reading of the journal and signature of the judge would be in the nature of approval of the judgment entered, and as it was within the power of the judge to correct or vacate such a judgment, even after signature, there is no hardship in that method of procedure. Again, where a trial of a cause upon the merits takes place before the court without a jury, the statute expressly permits the judge to take the case under advisement, and to file his findings of fact and law in vacation, and provides that the clerk shall at once enter a judgment upon the findings which are equivalent to a special verdict. See 3 Comp. Laws, §§ 10260, 10261, 10264; Delashman v. Berry, 20 Mich. 295; 1 Green’s New Practice (2d Ed.), p. 282. And we are of the opinion that questions of law only as well as of fact were intended to be included as within that practice, under the provision of section 10260; the last clause of that section increasing the time within which such filing should be made over that specified in cases of trial of questions of fact.

[489]*489In this case the paper filed, while not in itself a formal judgment upon which execution might issue, was a decision and determination of each question raised by the certiorari, and it concluded with the statement that the writ might be dismissed. We have no doubt that this was equivalent to determining the cause against the plaintiff in certiorari, and directing a judgment in favor of the defendant in certiorari — i. e., the plaintiff in the original action — and that the same was a valid compliance with the statutes cited.

Had the application for entry of judgment been made to Judge Frazer during his term, he should have granted it, unless reasons justifying a modification or a vacation of his findings were made to appear, and we see no reason why the same is not true as to his successor. Had there been an appeal to the judicial discretion, it might have been proper to decline to order a judgment, vacate the order, and direct a rehearing of the case, but we do not find evidence that this is what occurred. Apparently the denial was left to rest upon the ground that there had been a hearing, but no decision, or that, if a decision was made, it did not justify the judgment asked. We have already decided that there was a valid finding. We must yet consider the question last mentioned.

The determination as to all questions of law raised is plain. It is contended, however, that the only judgment that can be entered is that the writ be dismissed because that is what the order in terms provides for. Bearing in mind that the learned circuit judge decided every point raised against the contention of the plaintiff in certiorari, what judgment was his opponent entitled to? Section 948, 1 Comp. Laws, provides:

“ The court shall proceed to give judgment in the cause as the right of the matter may appear, without regarding technical omissions, imperfections or defects in the proceedings before the justice, which did not affect the merits; and may affirm or reverse the judgment, in whole or in part, and execution shall issue thereon, as upon other judgments rendered in the circuit or district court.”

[490]*490This statute apparently contemplates that the circuit court will enter a new judgment on which execution may issue, upon the original cause of action, unless it be where the writ does not confer jurisdiction to review, when perhaps a judgment of dismissal may be proper. Upon this, however, we express no opinion.

We have, then, a case where the circuit court on a valid writ heard and decided all points raised, concluding his decision with a direction for a judgment not authorized by the statute. The clerk did not enter judgment according to the practice pointed out by 3 Comp. Laws, § 10260, and there was nothing left for the defendant in certiorari to do but to ask the intervention of the court to obtain the entry of such a judgment as the decision warrants. Such an application to Judge Frazer would have been proper, and it is no less proper to address it to his successor, and either might enter such a judgment as the record upon its face clearly shows the defendant in error to be entitled to. Manifestly the successor could do no more without granting a rehearing, whether or not Judge Frazer could lawfully have done so.

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Related

Knack v. Berlin
114 N.W. 342 (Michigan Supreme Court, 1907)

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Bluebook (online)
111 N.W. 161, 147 Mich. 485, 1907 Mich. LEXIS 941, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/knack-v-wayne-circuit-judge-mich-1907.