Ringelberg v. Peterson

42 N.W. 1080, 76 Mich. 107, 1889 Mich. LEXIS 917
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 11, 1889
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 42 N.W. 1080 (Ringelberg v. Peterson) 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
Ringelberg v. Peterson, 42 N.W. 1080, 76 Mich. 107, 1889 Mich. LEXIS 917 (Mich. 1889).

Opinion

Morse, J.

Ringelberg sued Peterson before Thomas Walsh, one of the justices of the peace of the city of Grand Rapids, and declared upon a judgment rendered by William G. Saunders, a justice of the peace of the same city, on the fourteenth of July, 1885, for the sum of $24.20 damages, and $3 costs of suit, in favor of the said Ringelberg and against the said Peterson.

Peterson pleaded the general issue, and gave notice of set-off, and that he would show the judgment to be invalid.

The following was defendant’s, Peterson’s, bill of particulars of his set-off, to wit:

“Defendant’s bill of set-off is amount to satisfy in full demand in judgment, before rendition of judgment, July 14, 1885, and before commencement of suit on which judgment was rendered which is herein sued on. Such sum received by Ringelberg on or about Christmas, three years ago.”

The present, suit was. commenced by summons, December 21, 1886. It was tried before a jury, January 31,1887. The docket of the judgment before Justice Saunders was offered by the plaintiff, and admitted without objection, and the plaintiff rested. The defendant, Gustave Peterson, was sworn in his own behalf, and asked three questions, as follows:

“1. State what sums of money, if any, Mr. Ringelberg received from you previous to July 14, 1885, the time of the rendition of judgment on which this suit is brought.
“2. State what sums of money had been received by Mr. Ringelberg from you as a matter of set-off, previous to rendition of judgment against you in 1885.
“ 3. State what set-off, if any, you had against the claim on which judgment was rendered against you, and which has [109]*109been introduced in evidence to-day, at the time of the rendition of such judgment.”

Bach of these questions, when propounded in its order, was objected to by the plaintiff as incompetent and immaterial. The objection was in each case, and exception taken. The justice certifies that this was all the evidence taken in the cause; that the jury rendered a verdict for the plaintiff for the sum of $31.12, upon which verdict he entered judgment, and taxed the costs at $4.70.

The defendant, Peterson, removed this judgment to the circuit court for the county of Kent by writ of certiorari, alleging the following errors :

“ 1. That the said justice erroneously rejected the testimony offered by this deponent for the purpose of showing that said judgment was invalid.
“2. That said justice erroneously rejected the testimony offered by this deponent to show set-off, as against said judgment rendered by said Saunders.”
“3. That said justice erroneously sustained the objections made by the plaintiff to the several interrogatories herein-before set forth.”

After the cause was docketed in the circuit, the justice was required to make and file an amended return, which he did.

This amended return was procured on a showing by the affidavits of the jurors in the justice’s court, that the said Gustave Peterson was not permitted by said Justice Walsh to give any testimony,—

“ Bach and every question asked him by his counsel being objected to by plaintiff’s counsel, and each and every objection so made being sustained by said justice.
“That among the questions so asked of said defendant by his counsel was substantially the following, to wit: How did it happen that this judgment (referring to a judgment rendered in favor of said plaintiff and against said defendant, by W. G. Saunders, Bsq., then a justice of the peace,of the city of Grand Bapids, said county, on July 14, 1885) was rendered against you? And that thereupon defendant’s attorney, B. F. Sliter, stated to said Justice Walsh that he [110]*110proposed to show by said defendant, and also by his attorney, who appeared before said Saunders for said defendant, that said Saunders stated, both to said defendant and said attorney, on the day of the first adjournment of said cause before said Saunders, after having waited one hour from the hour of the return of said summons in said cause, that said cause was then and there dismissed out of his court, and that both said defendant and his said attorney thereupon at once left the office of said Saunders, and that neither of them then, nor until the month of December, 1886, knew that said Saunders had rendered any judgment in said cause.
“ That after said question had been asked, and the foregoing statement math- by defendant’s said attorney, J. E. McBride, attorney for said plaintiff, objected, upon the ground that it was inadmissible -and incompetent, which objection was sustained by said justice, and the said defendant not allowed to answer the same, to which decision of said justice said B. F. Sliter, attorney for defendant, then and there excepted; that said jury was compelled to give a verdict for said plaintiff for the full amount of his claim, because no testimony was admitted by said justice on the part of said defendant.”

In his amended return Justice Walsh certifies and returns a transcript of the docket entries and judgment in the suit before Justice Saunders, and the docket entries in the cause before him, and the original minutes made by him of the questions asked by defendant’s counsel of said Peterson, which minutes contain the three questions heretofore stated, and no others; and further returns that he has “no knowledge, recollection, or remembrance ” of the question stated in the. affidavits of the jurors to have been asked of Peterson by defendant’s counsel, and that he believes the aforesaid three questions to have been all the questions asked on said trial to which objection was made and sustained by the court.

In his first return the j ustice stated that to his recollection the defendant’s counsel stated in his opening to the jury that he expected to prove the facts, in relation to the taking of the judgment before Justice Sáunders, substantially as it is stated in said jurors’ affidavits that such counsel proposed to show after the asking of the question:

[111]*111“How did it happen that this judgment was rendered against you?”

The circuit judge, upon hearing argument of the writ, found no error in the proceedings before Justice Walsh affecting the merits of the controversy, and ordered that the judgment of said justice stand affirmed, and entered judgment in the circuit court in favor of Ringelberg, and against the defendant, and his surety as well, in the sum of $35.0?,. the amount of damages and costs in the justice’s judgment, with the legal interest thereon, together with the costs to be taxed.

The case comes into this Court on writ of error from the ■circuit court. It is alleged that the circuit judge erred in affirming the judgment of the justice, and also in entering a new judgment.

We think the court was correct in holding that there was no ■error in the justice’s court. The three questions asked of Peterson were incompetent.

The judgment rendered by Justice Saunders was valid on its face, and had never been appealed from, reversed, or vacated. The docket of that judgment showed that on the return-day defendant appeared and pleaded the general issue, .and upon agreement the case was adjourned to July 9, 1885.

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Bluebook (online)
42 N.W. 1080, 76 Mich. 107, 1889 Mich. LEXIS 917, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ringelberg-v-peterson-mich-1889.