Meracle v. Down

25 N.W. 412, 64 Wis. 323, 1885 Wisc. LEXIS 57
CourtWisconsin Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 3, 1885
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 25 N.W. 412 (Meracle v. Down) 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
Meracle v. Down, 25 N.W. 412, 64 Wis. 323, 1885 Wisc. LEXIS 57 (Wis. 1885).

Opinion

LyoN, J.

1. The defendant applied for a change of the place of trial from Jefferson county, where the action was pending, to some other county. The application was made solely on his affidavit that he had good reason to believe, and did believe, that he could not have a fair trial of the action on account of the prejudice of the people of Jefferson county. The circuit court granted the application, but subsequently, during the same term and while the record [327]*327still remained in such court, vacated the order changing the place of trial, and the cause was afterwards tried in the circuit court of Jefferson county. The vacating of such order is assigned for error.

The order changing the venue was made pursuant to ch. 314, Laws of 1883, which was supposed to be a valid law. The affidavit upon which the order was granted is entirely insufficient to authorize it under any other statute. It was vacated because it was made to appear to the court, by affidavit and reference to the legislative journals of the session of 1883, that ch. 314 was never enacted by the legislature. It passed the assembly, but was indefinitely postponed in the senate. Through some blunder it was enrolled as an act passed by both houses, was presented to the governor, and approved by him, and published as a law duly enacted. That it never was enacted, and hence is not a law, appears by the legislative journals and the records in the office of the secretary of state, of which probably the courts shoidd take judicial notice; but if not, they seem to have been sufficiently proved.

See. 4135, E. S., makes an authorized printed statute sufficient evidence thereof, but we cannot think the legislature intended thereby to make that a law which, although so printed, was never enacted by both branches of that body. Evidence may be sufficient and yet not conclusive. To hold that eh. 314 is a yalid law merely because it has been printed as such in the statutes, when it was never enacted, would be, in effect, to vest the power of legislation in some dishonest or inaccurate clerk. Of course the legislature, when it enacted sec. 4135, could not have intended anything so absurd and intolerable. We conclude, therefore, that the presence of eh. 314 in the Session Laws of 1883 is only prima facie evidence of its enactment by the legislature, which evidence is entirely rebutted by the conclusive proof that it was not so enacted.

[328]*328Tbe circuit court properly vacated the order changing the place of trial thus inadvertently made.

2. John Yoe, a witness called by the plaintiff, testified that immediately after the plaintiff was injured, he went to the defendant’s house and informed Miss Down, the defendant’s sister (who resided with him), and in his presence, of the accident and the cause of it, and that the sister replied: “ The dog is always doing something. I have licked him many a time for running out at teams.” Yoe also testified that defendant was asleep, but that they called his attention, and then he awoke. The defendant moved to strike from the testimony of Yoe all the conversation related by him which occurred when defendant was asleep. The court overruled the motion.

The material portion of that conversation was the remark of Miss Down, above quoted, which tended to show the vicious or mischievous habit of the dog. Certainly the defendant was awake some of the time when Yoe was there, and we are unable to find any satisfactory proof that ho ■was asleep when such remark was made by his sister. lie testified subsequently that he was not asleep when Yoe was there. Besides, if the testimony of what the sister said should be excluded, it is abundantly proved by other evidence in the case that the dog had been theretofore accustomed to bite, worry, and frighten horses. The testimony to this effect is so convincing and overwhelming that a special verdict to the contrary would have been set aside as against the evidence. ~We think the testimony was properly retained. If it was not, the error is rendered quite immaterial by the other proofs in the case.

3. Testimony was admitted, against defendant’s objection, tending to show that about three months after the plaintiff was injured the dog attacked and bit a horse of Mr. Code, which he was driving before a buggy, and that Mr. Code immediately informed the defendant what his dog had done.

[329]*329This testimony goes to sbow the vicious character of the dog, and tbe defendant’s knowledge thereof. Probably it was inadmissible and should have been rejected. But the error is immaterial for the reason that the vicious character of the dog was conclusively proved by other and competent testimony, and it was not necessary to the action to prove the seienter. The statute dispenses with such proof. E. S. sec. 1620. Hence such error must be disregarded. Sec. 2829, E. S. It was argued that this testimony might have enhanced the damages. But that cannot be, because only compensatory damages were allowed or given.

4. It appeared on the trial by the testimony, and by the admission of counsel for the plaintiff, that one Williams, a neighbor of defendant, owned a dog very similar in appearance to that of defendant. Williams resided a mile from defendant. It is not claimed that there is any proof that the dog of Williams was accustomed to go to defendant’s place, or that he was ever there.

The court rejected testimony offered for the purpose of showing that the Williams dog was also accustomed to attack, worry, and bite horses. Clearly the ruling was correct. The material question was, Did the dog of defendant or the dog of Williams do the mischief? The character of the latter dog was not in issue. The offered testimony, had it been received, would have raised a side issue which the pleadings did not call upon the plaintiff to be prepared to litigate. At most it was a mere make-weight, and we recall no rule of evidence which would justify the admission of the rejected testimony.

Counsel ingeniously argues that the testimony should have been received as adding another point of similarity common to the two dogs. But that seems scarcely necessary after the plaintiff had admitted that “ they are very much alike in form, shape, and general appearance.”

5. Mrs. Toe, a witness for plaintiff, testified that she was riding with Miss Down the summer before plaintiff was [330]*330injured, and defendant’s dog attacked and frightened the team they were driving. She was allowed to testify, under objection, to an admission then made by Miss Down that the dog had the bad habit of running at horses. Miss Down was cross-examined as to that conversation and denied any recollection of it.

It is claimed that the testimony was admissible as tending to impeach the credibility of Miss Down. We fail to find any testimony given by her as to the habits and character of the dog, and are inclined to think that when plaintiff examined her on that subject (which was entirely outside her testimony in chief) he made her his own witness to that extent, and was bound by her statement. But the conversation went only to the question of the character and habits of the defendant’s dog, and we have already seen that he was proved to be vicious or mischievous beyond the power of a jury to find otherwise. So the error in admitting the impeaching testimony (if error it was) is of no importance.

6. The circuit judge instructed the jury at considerable length, and gave several instructions proposed on behalf of the plaintiff.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
25 N.W. 412, 64 Wis. 323, 1885 Wisc. LEXIS 57, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/meracle-v-down-wis-1885.