Oatman v. Bond

15 Wis. 20
CourtWisconsin Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 15, 1862
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 15 Wis. 20 (Oatman v. Bond) 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
Oatman v. Bond, 15 Wis. 20 (Wis. 1862).

Opinions

By the Court,

Cole, J.

This is an appeal from an order of the circuit court of Rock county, made in this cause on the application of the respondent, requiring the appellant to give security for costs in the action by a written undertaking in the sum of five hundred dollars, and staying all proceedings on the part of the appellant until such security was filed and approved by the court; and further directing that the cause be referred to William H. Pettit to take all the testimony to be taken in this state, which either party might desire to use on the trial of the same. It is admitted that this order was entered under and pursuant to sections one and ten of chapter 88, Laws of 1861.

On the argument of this and other cases on the calendar, involving the same question, a preliminary objection was taken, that such an order under our statute was not ap-pealable, and therefore that this court could not review it. But in answer to this objection it is claimed that such an order is appealable on several grounds. It is claimed that it is appealable under the first clause of section 10, chapter 264, Laws of 1860, as being an order which affects a substantial right, by determining the action and preventing a judgment from which an appeal might be taken. We do not think the order is appealable under this clause of the statute. It can hardly be said that this order in effect determines the action and prevents a j udgment, although it would likely tend greatly to protract the litigation and embarrass the appellant in obtaining judgment. Now the order which affects [23]*23a substantial right under this clause, is one which determines the action; the words “ substantial right” being qualified and restricted by the subsequent language in the same clause. The order in this case clearly does not determine the action, since it is not impossible for the parties to proceed and take all the testimony, and finally to have a trial and adjudication of the court upon the merits. Consequently it cannot be maintained that this order affects a substantial right and determines the action, and hence it does not come within the class of orders referred to in the first subdivision of section 10, chapter 264.

But it was further claimed that the order was appealable under the fourth clause or subdivision of that section. This makes an order appealable “ when it involves the merits of an action or some part thereof,” &c. Can this order, which refers the cause to a person to take and report to the court all the testimony which either party may desire to give in the action or use on the trial, be said to involve the merits of the action or any part of it? We think it does.

It must be admitted that the language here used to determine the appealability of an order, is succeptible of different interpretations. The order, to be appealable, must involve the merits of an action or some part of it. In placing a com struction upon this provision of the statute, of course much will depend upon the force and meaning given to the word ‘‘ merits” as here used. Justice Selden, of New York, in construing the corresponding provision of the Code of that state, in St. John et al. vs. West et al., 4 How. Prac. R., 329, thought the word “ merits,” as here used, should be understood as meaning the strict legal rights of the parties as con-tradistinguished from mere questions of practice which every court regulates for itself, and from all matters which depend upon the discretion or favor of the court. The order appealed from in that ease was one denying an application to substitute certain parties as plaintiffs in place of the original plaintiff, who had deceased since the commencement of the suit. The judge held that the statute gave the personal representatives or successors in interest the right of continuing the suit upon coming in within a year of the death of [24]*24the original plaintiff, and that an appeal would lie from an order denying an application made for the single purpose of enforcing this right. The appeal however was dismissed on other grounds. In Cram vs. Bradford, 4 Abbotts’ Pr. R., 198, it was held that an order which directed a reference in a case in which a reference was not authorized by law, was an appealable order; and that a court could not be said to have the power to grant or refuse.a statutory right at its discretion. In Green vs. Wood, 6 Abbotts’ Pr. R., 277, it was held that the examination of a party before trial as provided by the Code, was a matter of strict right, if claimed by the adverse party, and an order refusing such examination was appealable.' In La Farge vs. The La Farge Ins. Co., 14 How. Pr. R., 26, Justice Boswoeth decided that an order refusing an attachment against a witness disobeying a subpoena requiring him to produce documentary evidence material to the party subpoenaing him, and which it was his duty to produce, was an appealable order. A party, he said, has a right to have the remedies provided by law, to secure the attendance of material and necessary witnesses, or the production of material and necessary evidence, enforced in his behalf, when he has been vigilant and done all which is in-, cumbent on him to do to obtain such attendance, and an order which, without fault or laches on his part, prevents the remedies being made effectual,’necessarily involves the merits and affects a substantial right.

In the case of Rahn vs. Gunnison, 12 Wis., 528, we had occasion to consider what the legislature intended by the language, an order which involves the merits of an action or some part thereof” That was an appeal from an order refusing to set aside a summons and complaint for irregularity. The particular irregularity complained of was, that the summons, which on its face showed that it was issued in a suit in the county court of Milwaukee county, was attested in the name of the judge of the circuit court. We held the order not appealable for the reason that it was impossible to say that the mere matter of having a summons properly attested involved the merits of an action. A summons, we thought, was, in-the nature of a notice from the plaintiff to [25]*25the defendant of the commencement of a suit, and related merely to the form or proceeding of bringing a party into court, and therefore, whether properly attested or not, could not in any way involve the merits of the litigation. In this latter case Mr. Justice Paine criticises some of the views expressed by Mr. Justice Selden in St John vs. West upon the proper meaning and import of the word “ merits,” and thinks the definition given by him too comprehensive. His idea is that the term “ merits,” as used in this statute, relates to matters of substance in the law, *as distinguished from mere matters of form which do not affect the subject matter of the litigation. But even within this construction of the provision of the statute, it is clear that the order in the present case is appealable. Eor in the case of Brown vs. Runals, 14 Wis., 693, it was distinctly held that each party to a suit in equity, was, under our constitution, entitled to have his witnesses examined in open court, subject only to the occasional exceptions provided for in cases at law. The order in this case attempts to deprive the parties of this constitutional right, by referring the cause to a person to take all the testimony out of court which either party might desire to use on the trial.

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Bluebook (online)
15 Wis. 20, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/oatman-v-bond-wis-1862.