Shaw & Morehouse v. Moser

3 Mich. 71
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 15, 1853
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 3 Mich. 71 (Shaw & Morehouse v. Moser) 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
Shaw & Morehouse v. Moser, 3 Mich. 71 (Mich. 1853).

Opinion

By the Court,

Johnson, J.

This was an action of assumpsit originally tried before a Justice of the Peace. The plaintiffs in error, who were the defendants below, did not appear before the Justice, and judgment was rendered against them.

'Shaw, one of the defendants below, appealed to the County Court, and one of the special causés of appeal set out in his affidavit, was that the J ustice below acquired no jurisdiction over the defendánfs by reason of the insufficiency of the re^ turn of the constable upon the original summons, which said return was in the following language, viz: “Personally served true copies of' the within by reading,” dated and properly signed by the constable.

After the cause was appealed to the County Court, and after a continuance thereof, it was brought to a hearing, before the County Judge, upon the above question so raised by the affidavit. The language of the record is, “ It was brought to a trial upon the error alleged in the affidavit for appeal, for defect of service of summons appearing on the return thereof, and the same having been heard by the Court, it is considered .that said judgment be not reversed by reason of said error.”

After this decision of the County Court, the cause was elected to the Circuit Court for trial by the defendant in error; and after its removal into the Circuit Court the plaintiffs in error filed their joint plea of the general issue to the declaration of the defendant in error, and upon that issue the cause was tried, and judgment again rendered against the plaintiffs in error.

The errors assigned are substantially as follows:

First. That the Justice (for the reasons above stated) acquired no jurisdiction over the defendants.

Secondly. That the County Court erred in not reversing said judgment upon such question of jurisdiction^ and

[73]*73Thirdly. That the Circuit Court had no jurisdiction over this cause, for the reason that the appeal was taken by Shaw .alone, and not by both of the defendants in the Court below.

We will proceed to examine these questions in their order.

First. Does the return show a proper service of the original summons upon the defendants below.

The Revised Statutes of 1846, page 389, § 15, provides that summons should be served by reading the same to defendant and (if required by him) delivering a copy thereof”

Personally served ” has been held in the State of New York under similar statute to be evidence of a good service (Legg vs. Stillman, 2 Cow. 418.) In that case, the motion to dismiss before the Justice was overruled, and the Court, upon certiorari sustained the decision.

So it was held in the case of Bromley et al. vs. Smith, 2 Hill, 517. That was an action of debt upon a JUstice’s judgment. The entry upon the docket showed a similar return. it w¿b objected that, inasmuch as the defendant did not appear, such a return Was not sufficient to give the Court jurisdiction ; but the Court held otherwise.

From these authorities it would appear then that “ personally served ” would be a good return. It “recognizes,” says the Court, in the casé first cited, “ a summons served by reading it to the defendants

"What is the language of the return in the case before us ? Personally served true eúpies of the within by readings The fair import of thé language is, we think, that hé “ personally served the within by reading and true copies.” At all events we think it sufficiently appears that he read the summons to the defendants, and that is sufficient.

It is true, this return is inartistically drawn, but we are not to apply the strict grammatical rules of construction in determining upon the fair import and meaning of a constable’s return. The records of proceedings before a Justice should be certain to a common intent, and that is all that is required.

[74]*74The counsel for the plaintiffs has cited the case of Campau vs. Fairbanks, 1 Mann. Mich. R. 151, as decisive in this case. That case arose under the- statute of 1833, page 194, which required that a summons should be served by “ reading the same to the defendant, and by delivering a copy thereof ” — ' clearly distinguishable from the present statute in this : the ■one required uncondition ally the delivery of a copy; th mother upon the condition only that the defendant should require it.

The return in that case was, “ served the within by reaching personally,” and clearly no inference could be drawn from such a return that the officer had delivered a copy, as was ZKjquii-ed by the statute, and especially as he had attempted to specify the manner of service.

We think, therefore, that this case is not in point, and cannot be regarded as an authority in favor of the plaintiffs.

This likewise disposes of the second error assigned ; that the County Court erred in not reversing said judgment on the insufficiency of said return, for it appears from the record that that was the only question submitted to and' decided by the Court.

It was insisted- on the argument that the plaintiffs in error waived any right they might have had to take exceptions to-the insufficiency of the return upon the summons, by taking an appeal; that such an act was eqvivalent to a general appearance in the cause; and also that such question could not be raised by an appeal, but that if the plaintiffs wished to avail themselves of that question, they were driven to a certioraii; that as this question did not present an issue of la,w for the decision of the Court, the effect of an appeal would simply authorize that Court to try the cause upon its merits.

But the view that we have taken of this case dispenses with -the necessity of deciding these questions.

It would seem, however, that the decision of the former «question would depend upon that of the latter.

If the office of an appeal is simply to try the cause upon [75]*75its merits, then it would not be unreasonable to say that the plaintiffs in error waived any objection to the jurisdiction of their persons by such an act, and such seems to bo the purport of the authorities. (Malone vs. Clark, 2 Hill, 657; Woods vs. Randall, 5 Hill, 264.)

If, on the other hand, the act of 1849, p. 101, regulating appeals, be so construed as to authorize the appellate court to hear and decide all questions of law raised in the court below, preliminary to hearing the cause on the merits, then we think that taking an appeal would not be such an appearance in the cause as to waive the objection, and for the purpose of this cause it is sufficient to say, that this being a jurisdictional question, we have no doubt of the authority of the County Court to entertain and decide the question presented to him for consideration in this case.

The only remaining question then is, whether the Circuit Court acquired by the appeal in this case, any jurisdiction to try the same.

It is assigned for error, and was insisted on the argument, that inasmuch as the appeal in this case was taken by Shaw alone, and not by both the plaintiffs in error, that the Circuit Court acquired no jurisdiction to try the cause. It will be remembered that this objection was not raised in the Circuit Court.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
3 Mich. 71, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/shaw-morehouse-v-moser-mich-1853.