Welles v. Mayor of Detroit

2 Doug. 77
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 15, 1845
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 2 Doug. 77 (Welles v. Mayor of Detroit) 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
Welles v. Mayor of Detroit, 2 Doug. 77 (Mich. 1845).

Opinion

Goodwin, J.

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The question presented by this case is, whether the Mayor’s Court of the city of Detroit, has jurisdiction of proceedings instituted under the provisions of chapter 1, p. 506, of the Revised Statutes of 1838, entitled “ Of proceedings against debtors by attachment.”

[78]*78It is claimed that the jurisdiction is conferred by the " act relative to the city of Detroit,” approved April 4, 1827, (R. L. 1827, p. 570,) and the act to amend the charier of the cily of Detroit,” approved April 12, 1841, (S. L. 1841, p. 192,) — especially by the latter.

It is most manifest that the jurisdiction cannot be sustained under the act of April 4, 1827 ; for, if the proceedings authorized by the attachment law found in the Revised Laws of 1827, were, as is insisted, embraced within its jurisdiction, by the act conferring its powers, yet, as by the Revised Statutes of 1838, that attachment law was repealed, and a new one passed, expressly designating the court in which those proceedings should be had, the jurisdiction would necessarily be excluded. This is a special statutory remedy, unknown to the common law ; and in the chapter of the Revised Statutes of 1838, referred to, the proceedings are to be in the circuit court, and by its officers; — the writ to be issued by the clerk of that court; — to be directed to the sheriff of the county, and executed by him ; apdthe whole are specially prescribed throughout, with reference to that court only. A reference, then, to the act of 1827, is only important as it is to be taken in connection with that of 1841, as to the jurisdiction claimed.

By the act of 1827, the mayor’s court is made a court of record, the clerk of the city is its clerk, and the city marshal and constables are required to attend it; — and "the marshal and other ministerial officers” of the city are required to execute and return its process. Its sessions are monthly, on the second Monday of each month. It is clothed with a restricted criminal jurisdiction, over certain offences committed within the city, and power and authority is given to it, in the language of the act, “ to hear, try, and determine, according to the laws of the United States, and of this territory, and according to the [79]*79by-laws and ordinances of the said common council, and according to the course of the common law, all actions, personal or mixed, arising within the limits of said city, to which the mayor, recorder, aldermen and freemen of said city, in their corporate capacity, are a party, and especially for the collection of taxes and other debts due to said corporation,” &c. § 38.

The jurisdiction thus conferred is local, extending only to actions of the description mentioned, arising within the city, and to which the corporation is a party; in other words, it is a special, limited jurisdiction.

By the act of 1841, <§, 3, it is provided that, “ in addition to the powers it now has, it shall have and exercise original jurisdiction in all personal actions and remedies at law, arising within the bounds of said city, and to which the mayor, &c. in their corporate capacity are a party plaintiff,” — “ and the said court shall have and exercise all the powers usually exercised by any court of record at the common law, for the full exercise of the jurisdiction given to it by law.”

By section 4, “any civil action, of which said mayor’s court has jurisdiction, may be commenced and proceeded in, in the same manner as is or may be required by the laws of the state in relation to such actions in the circuit court for the county of Wayne, so far as the same can apply.”

The question is, whether, by these provisions, the jurisdiction is conferred. The phraseology of the first clause of the third section, “ personal actions and remedies at law,” is very broad; but it may well be doubted whether the legislature intended thereby to authorize this special remedy, in regard to which the statute is express throughout as to the courts and officers by whom its proceedings shall be conducted, and minute in its directions as to all those proceedings ; and the more especially, as [80]*80in the next clause of the same section, the exercise of “ all the power usually exercised by courts of record at the common law, is expressly authorized for the full exercise of its jurisdiction.” The proceeding by attachment is in the first instance in rem: it is strictly a statutory remedy, and one in which the course marked out by statute, at least as to all its substantial provisions, is required to be strictly pursued. If the provisions of the chapter referred to are literally pursued, the city officers,, clerk, or marshal, can have no agency in executing them; but they are confined to the circuit court and its officers. But, if there be ambiguity in this section in reference to the intent of the legislature, it is removed by the provision in tbe fourth section, that any civil action may be commenced, and proceeded in, as by the laws of the state in relation to such actions in the circuit court for the county of Wayne, so far as the same can apply. Under the statute, civil actions of the nature of that in this case, may be commenced and proceeded in by attachment in the circuit court for the county of Wayne. It is one of the circuit courts embraced in the act. ' Can the law, and the proceedings under it, apply to the mayor’s court? If not applicable to it, then, most manifestly, the mayor’s court has not the jurisdiction. For the course of proceedings at the common law, and those prescribed relating to the circuit court for the county of Wayne, furnish the guides for its modes of proceeding under these sections.

By the attachment law, upon the return of the writ by the sheriff, a notice is required to be made by the clerk, and delivered to the plaintiff, which he is required to cause to be published, within thirty days — the publication to be for six weeks in succession. If a claim of property is interposed upon the service of the attachment, the officer serving it is required to give notice to a justice of the peace, who is thereupon to issue a venire for five jurors [81]*81to try the right, and from their decision and the judgment of the justice, an appeal may be taken to the circuit court.

The plaintiff, on an affidavit that the defendant in attachment has property in another county, may take another writ of attachment, directed to the sheriff of such county, upon which such property may be attached.

The defendant is to be called at the first, and two successive terms, and, at or before the third term, the plaintiff and other creditors may file declarations in the cause upon which proceedings may be had to judgment. After judgment, the property is required to be sold, and the proceeds distributed to those who have obtained such judgments, in proportion to their amount. And, if the original plaintiff discontinue, or is defended against successfully, it does not affect the proceedings of the other creditors who have filed their declarations.

If attachments have been issued by justices of the peace, under the statute authorizing such special proceedings by them, they are superseded by an attachment against the property of the defendant from the circuit court, and the property goes into the hands of the sheriff upon the circuit court process ; — the parties, however, being allowed to proceed to judgment before the justices, and file transcripts of such judgments in the circuit court, and obtain thereon their pro rata distribution.

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Related

Swift v. Judges of the Circuit Court
31 N.W. 434 (Michigan Supreme Court, 1887)
Pray v. Mayor of Jersey City
33 N.J.L. 506 (Supreme Court of New Jersey, 1869)

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Bluebook (online)
2 Doug. 77, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/welles-v-mayor-of-detroit-mich-1845.