Vonzellen v. Baraga Circuit Judge

205 N.W. 482, 232 Mich. 568, 1925 Mich. LEXIS 891
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 6, 1925
DocketCalendar 32,118
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 205 N.W. 482 (Vonzellen v. Baraga Circuit Judge) 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
Vonzellen v. Baraga Circuit Judge, 205 N.W. 482, 232 Mich. 568, 1925 Mich. LEXIS 891 (Mich. 1925).

Opinion

Steere, J.

Appellant seeks by mandamus to compel defendant to set aside an order made April 13, 1925, in the circuit court of Baraga county, refusing to “sign a case made or extend the time in which said case on appeal may be settled and the record may be signed,” in a chancery suit begun and heard in said court, entitled Grand Rapids Trust Company, a Michigan corporation, as trustee of Charles E. Cartier and Edward M. Holland, copartners trading under the name of Cartier-Holland Lumber Company, v. John O. VonZellen and John O. VonZellen and Oscar Von Zellen, copartners under the name of Arvon Lumber Company.

The bill in that suit was filed to foreclose a mortgage on lands in Baraga county. It was heard and submitted the latter part of April, 1924. A decree of foreclosure was rendered in plaintiff’s favor dated May 10, 1924, and filed on May 12, 1924. On.May 19, 1924, Walter M. Nelson of Detroit was substituted as counsel for appellant in the place of the previous attorney of record. On that date appellant’s, claim of appeal in said suit was filed and served. Within the. time required by law the clerk’s fee on appeal was paid and a costs bond in the sum of $250 filed. The stenographer’s certificate showing that transcript of the testimony had been ordered was filed on May 29, 1924, a consent order was entered extending time for perfecting the appeal to August 29, 1924. A transcript of the testimony was furnished appellant’s counsel July 8, 1924. On August 19, 1924, a consent order was made on appellant’s motion further extending the time to perfect his appeal to September 29, 1924. Within the time so extended appellant’s appeal *570 was not perfected. No cost or stay bond on appeal was approved by the judge who heard the suit, nor presented to him for approval after notice to plaintiff’s counsel of time and place, nor was any case containing the evidence for review presented to the judge for settlement in compliance with Circuit Court Rule No. 66 on or before September 29, 1924. No further application was made to extend the time until April 13, 1925, when the motion in question here was presented to the trial judge, after proper notice to opposing counsel, by attorney George Barstow, of Menominee, who had recently been substituted as counsel in place of Attorney Walter M. Nelson, of Detroit. This motion was not noticed for hearing until after plaintiff’s counsel had caused the circuit court commissioner of Baraga county to advertise a foreclosure sale of the mortgaged premises to. be held on February 16, 1925, pursuant to the decree of foreclosure in said suit. The sale was adjourned at the request of appellant’s counsel to March 16, 1925, and on that day again adjourned at appellant’s request to April 16, 1925.

Affidavits of the respective sides were presented in support of and against this motion. That granting or denying the same nearly a year after the decree had been on due notice settled, signed and filed, and over six months after the last extension of time had expired, was discretionary with the judge who heard the case is well settled. Ostrander v. Alpena Circuit Judge, 211 Mich. 575; Laphurn v. Wayne Circuit Judge, 231 Mich. 449, and cases there cited.

The only question before us is whether appellant’s protracted delay was excused and good cause for extension of time so clearly shown on April 13, 1925, that the circuit judge can affirmatively be found guilty of an abuse of discretion in denying said motion.

It appears by the affidavit of Attorney Nelson that *571 in the months of August and September, 1924, he prepared a case made for review and caused the same to be printed in the form of galley sheets, one set of which he sent to plaintiff’s attorneys in Grand Rapids who acknowledged its receipt; that he thereafter received from them suggestions for alterations and modifications of the same which he incorporated in the galley sheets, and so corrected had the record of the case for appeal printed; that later certain omissions were noted, information for which was furnished by plaintiff’s attorneys, and by agreement inserted by him in said record; that “the record of the case made was agreed upon by attorneys for the parties hereto a considerable period before the 29th of September, 1924.”

The version of plaintiff’s counsel as to that transaction is that without previous arrangement Attorney Nelson sent them so-called “galley proof” of the proposed record without any transcript of the testimony, which they thereupon requested and received from him. They then made certain corrections in the proposed record; but there were yet certain blanks in the galley proofs for which they did not have the information ; there was at no time any intention of treating said printed record received and partially corrected by them as a record of the case on appeal without the same having been first submitted to the court and approved by it, and they at no time consented that the same “be printed and filed before it was agreed to by counsel for plaintiffs and approved by the court,” nor to extension of time to settle the same beyond September 29, 1924.

Between May 27th and September 13, 1924, there was some correspondence between the judge who heard the suit and appellant’s counsel. It is argued as a ground for holding defendant abused his judicial discretion in declining to grant appellant’s motion *572 presented on April 13, 1925, for settlement of the case or further extension of time, that in a letter of May-31, 1924, to Attorney Nelson, advising that the $250 cost bond filed with the clerk of Baraga county had not been presented for approval, he indicated that a suitable stay bond would be required “for the purpose of settling the case and perfecting your appeal.” In the connection used we see nothing misleading in this quotation. First referring to. the cost bond the judge said no application had been made to him to designate the penalty or approve form and sureties, cited the sections of the statute relative to bonds on appeal, and said:

“I shall be satisfied with a bond in the penal sum of $5,000, but in order that you may have a stay for the purpose of settling the case and perfecting your appeal and that the appeal may operate as a stay, you must have the condition of the bond comply with the statute above cited.”

On June 3, 1924, appellant’s counsel replied, saying among other things, “It is the desire of the defendants that the bond approved by you shall operate as stay until the determination of the case.” He also submitted on that subject the “two propositions” that a bond for security for costs alone would be sufficient because the value of the lands against which foreclosure was decreed “amply covers the amount found due” and in event the judge felt “the bond should secure not only the payment of costs but should provide a duplicated security for the payment of the principal sum with interest” he respectfully submitted that the bond “should be only a reasonable sum — more than the total found due, as for instance $3,750 or $4,000.”

On June 6, 1924, the judge replied, referring to and repeating in part the statements in his previous letter, again cited the statute and advised that the cost bond filed could not operate as a stay bond, he considered

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Related

Von Zellen v. Westrom
265 N.W. 463 (Michigan Supreme Court, 1936)
Grand Rapids Trust Co. v. Von Zellen
255 N.W. 424 (Michigan Supreme Court, 1934)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
205 N.W. 482, 232 Mich. 568, 1925 Mich. LEXIS 891, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/vonzellen-v-baraga-circuit-judge-mich-1925.