McNamara v. Minnesota Central Railway Co.

12 Minn. 388
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedJuly 15, 1867
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 12 Minn. 388 (McNamara v. Minnesota Central Railway Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McNamara v. Minnesota Central Railway Co., 12 Minn. 388 (Mich. 1867).

Opinion

By the Oowrt

Wilson, Ch. J.

The appellant is the owner of lands in Steele County, over which the defendant’s road was laid. Commissioners appointed under the statute to assess the damages occasioned by the location of the road, made their award, from which an appeal was taken to the District Court of said County, and in that Court the verdict rendered by the jury in the case was set aside, and a new trial ordered.

The appellant has attempted to remove the case to this Court by an appeal from the order granting a new trial.

When this order was made — Feb. 9, 1867, — it was not appealable, but the legislature by an act approved March 1,1867, authorized an appeal from an order granting a new trial.

The respondent’s counsel argues that the act of March 1st, 1867, not being in terms retrospective, does not allow an appeal from an order made prior to its passage, but the contrary is settled by the case of Convers vs. Barrows, 2 Minn., 240.

It is also argued by the respondent, that an appeal to this Court is not by our law allowed in special'proceedings of this kind. It is admitted that an appeal is not allowed by the special law authorizing proceedings for the assessment of damages in such cases. The decision of this question, therefore, makes necessary a construction of our general statutes allowing appeals to this Court. Ohapter 86 contains the law on this subject, and sections 1 cmd 8 of the Chapter enumerate all the cases in which appeals are by it allowed. The óther sections of the chapter designate the mode of taking an appeal, its effect, &c. In interpreting sections one and eight, we must hold, either that they refer to different cases, or classes of cases, or that section eight is an enumeration of [390]*390the judgments and orders declared appealable by section one.

If the former theory is adoj)ted, then section one would seem to authorize an appeal from any order made in a civil action, and section eight from any order falling within the classes therein enumerated, made in any action or proceeding by a court, judge, or other officer authorized to make such order. "We think this is not an admissible interpretation of the statute. If section one was intended to cover all judgments and orders in a civil action, then nearly all of the provisions of section eight are inoperative and superfluous. A theory that leads to such consequences is to be avoided, if possible, for it is a well settled rule that a statute ought, upon the whole, to be so construed, that if it can be prevented, no clause, section, or word shall be superfluous, void or insignificant. Bac. Ab. Stat. 1, 2.

This view would also be contrary to the settled practice and holding of the courts ever since the adoption of the lie-vised Statutes of the Territory, for it lias never been held that the former section allowed an appeal, except in cases enumerated in the latter; and the legislature in adopting these sections, and incorporating them into the general statutes, can not be presumed to have used the words in a different sense from that given to them before the revision. Sedgwick on Stat. Law, 428-9; Rutland vs. Meridan, 1 Pick. 154; Case of J. V. N. Yates, 4 J. R. 359; Cresswell vs. Crane, 7 Barb. 198.

In the last cited case the court says, “ The intention of the legislature to alter the law must be evident, or the language of the new act must be such as palpably to require a different construction, before the courts will hold the law changed upon such a revision, merely from the fact of the change of the language employed.” Moreover, to grant an appeal from every order in an action, would be so manifestly absurd, so [391]*391inconvenient in the administration of justice, and so prejudicial to justice, we cannot presume it to liave been intended by the legislature, unless the language used clearly leads to such conclusion. Sea. 3 of said chapter provides. An appeal shall be made by the service of a notice in writing on the adverse party, and on the clerk with whom the judgment or order appealed from is entered.” This is the prescribed mode of taking an appeal in every case under the chapter, and as no order unless made by the coxvrt is entered with the clerk, this section clearly indicates that none else was intended to be appealable.

But farther: to permit an appeal to this court from an ex parte order made by a judge, or an order made by a court commissioner would be perverting our judiciary system. This is an appellate court (except in certain specified cases:) it is not the intention of our organic, or statutory law, that a case should be presented to the Supreme Court except for revision; but if appeals are allowed from expa/rte orders, made by officers without hearing, or without a deliberate decision of the point involved, or from any order that has not been presented to the court below for deliberate decision, then the intention of our law is thwarted. It is well understood, as a matter of practice, that an officer granting an ex pa/rte order, does not ordinarily, in the first instance, deliberately pass upon and determine the point involved. If it is considered that the order was improvidently granted, a _ motion is made to the court to vacate, and on that motion both parties are heard, and a deliberate judgment of the court obtained, from which an appeal lies ; until such hearing and decision, there is no ground for an appeal, for no question has been decided; to sooner present the question to this court, is not to ask it to affirm or reverse the .judgment or order of an inferior courtj but to pass upon a question not decided in that court. Such [392]*392practice, as we have said, is contrary to the spirit of our law. It is too, an injustice to inferior courts, indicating error when there has been no deliberate judgment or decision of the question, a wrong to suitors, and to the community, for it delays and makes expensive the administration of justice.

It is held that a revised code of laws is to be construed as contemporaneous acts, parts of one entire system of law. 1 D. Chipman, 348. We may, therefore, look at other parts of our general statutes for light on the provisions of this chapter. If the legislature intended hy the general language of chapter 86, to allow appeals in special proceedings, as well as in civil actions, then of course it would not elsewhere have provided for appeals in such proceedings. But Sec. 13 p. 555 of the general statutes reads : “ An appeal lies to the Supreme court from the district court in mandamus as in civil actions.” This provision is inserted ex industria, and clearly indicates the view of the legislature that by the general law such appeal was not authorized. Sec. 180, page 475, ib., provides: “ Any party to a proceeding under this title (garnishment) deeming himself aggrieved by any order or final judgment therein, may remove the same from a justice’s court to the district court, or from a district court to the Supreme Court, by appeal, in the same cases, and in like manner, and with like effect as in a civil action.” This, with equal clearness, shows the view of the legislature that our appeal law does not reach special proceedings, unless where they are expressly mentioned. Sec. 22 page 571, ib., (actions against boats and vessels) provides for an “appeal from the judgment as in other cases.” Sec. 82 p. 114

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Bluebook (online)
12 Minn. 388, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcnamara-v-minnesota-central-railway-co-minn-1867.