Wernik v. Wayne Circuit Judge

207 N.W. 842, 234 Mich. 224, 1926 Mich. LEXIS 553
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 26, 1926
DocketCalendar 32,072
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 207 N.W. 842 (Wernik v. Wayne 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
Wernik v. Wayne Circuit Judge, 207 N.W. 842, 234 Mich. 224, 1926 Mich. LEXIS 553 (Mich. 1926).

Opinion

Steere, J.

Plaintiffs seek by mandamus to compel defendant to set aside an order made by him as circuit judge on June 9, 1925, dismissing their cross-appeal in a chancery suit of Wayne county brought by plaintiffs against Michael Kolodziejczck and several others in which a decree had been signed and filed on March 13, 1925. After decree the following took place: On March 18, 1925, two of the defendants, named Kaluzny, filed a claim of appeal, paid the required appeal fee, obtained and filed the stenographer’s *226 certificate, and secured a written order granting 60 days’ additional time in which, to perfect their appeal, all within the 20-day limit after decree. On March 23, 1925, plaintiffs filed their claim of appeal and paid no appeal fee, filed no stenographer’s certificate and made no motion for extension of time. On March 27, 1925, defendant Kolodziejczck filed his claim of appeal. ■ He filed no stenographer’s certificate, but on April 1, 1925, obtained an order of 60 days’ extension of time. On June 6, 1925, he moved for an order dismissing plaintiffs’ appeal on the ground that they had not within the first 20 days moved for an additional 60 days to perfect their appeal or taken any further steps to that end. Said motion was granted and an order of dismissal entered June 9, 1925. Defendant’s return herein to an order to show cause states as his ground for dismissing plaintiffs’ appeal that—

“by reason of said plaintiffs having failed to take any action at all to further perfect their appeal in said cause within the said 20-day period following the entry of decree therein, that this court so far as relators herein be concerned, lost jurisdiction.”

| It is admitted that in the chancery case out of which this proceeding arose certain of the defendants first filed their claim of appeal and have taken within the required time all necessary steps to perfect the same. They thereby removed the case to this court and conferred upon it jurisdiction to hear the same de novo, upon pleading's and proofs before the court in the original hearing as certified and returned on appeal from that court. It is conceded such is and has long been the general rule in this jurisdiction, and there is no occasion to cite the various decisions by this, court discussing that proposition and so holding. But with them went the early and repeated qualification, as occasion arose, that an adverse party who has failed *227 to appeal from a decree may not have it modified or changed in his favor. In the early case of Proctor v. Robinson, 35 Mich. 284, this court said, speaking through Justice Graves:

“Robinson alone appealed. As no appeal has been taken on the other side, previous decisions of this court forbid any variation of the decree in favor .of complainant.”

We are not advised what this chancery suit was about, or the nature of .the decree rendered in the court below, beyond the fact that it was final and evidently adverse to the claims of at least three of the several defendants, particularly defendants Kaluzny, who» made haste to file their claim of appeal, followed im due time by all requisite steps to perfect the same,, which, irrespective of what the other litigants did, transferred the case in toto to this court with full jurisdiction to rehear the same as before outlined. They having claimed an appeal and started the case to this court for review, plaintiffs, as adverse and apparently prevailing parties, took a so-called cross-appeal and timely filed their claim of appeal, indicating that the decree they obtained did not afford the full measure of relief they asked and on review they would claim additional affirmative relief. Trailing plaintiffs’ appeal defendant Kolodziejczck recovered command of his name sufficiently to subscribe, or have it subscribed, to a claim of appeal within the requisite 20 days and obtain a 60-day extension of time. Within that time he made this motion to dismiss plaintiffs’ appeal because they had not obtained an extension of time, as he had done, nor filed the stenographer’s certificate and paid the appeal fee, as he had not done.

In the numerous cases brought before this court involving irregularities, in appeal proceedings, it has had frequent occasion to emphasize that appeals are purely statutory and the appellate court acquires no *228 jurisdiction to entertain a case unless the jurisdictional statutory requirements and authorized rules promulgated pursuant to them have been complied with. That subject was concisely clarified and the essentials summarized by Justice Hooker in Waterman v. Bailey, 111 Mich. 571, and again in Walker v. Wayne Circuit Judge, 226 Mich. 393, where requirements of our statutes and auxiliary rules for conferring jurisdiction, both on the law and equity side of the court, were concisely summarized by Justice McDonald in plain and unmistakable terms.

When jurisdiction is once acquired in chancery cases the appellate court hears them' de novo and reviews on the record returned both questions of law and fact, with the qualification before noted, while on the law side of the court only questions of law are reviewed under such claimed errors as the party taking out a writ of error sees fit to assign. If the opposing party desires to review other and different rulings of law by the trial court adverse to his interest, and presumably favorable to his opponent, he must take out his own writ of error and independently assign his additional claimed errors for review under it before the court can take jurisdiction to entertain them. In chancery appeals no assignment of errors is required and a claim of appeal is the only official notice to the court or opposing counsel that the appealing party is dissatisfied with the decree appealed from. It negatives the inference which otherwise might arise from his silence and inaction that he is satisfied with the decree of the lower court, to his exclusion from urging any claim in the appellate court beyond its validity.

The question arising on irregularities in appeals which this court has most often been required to seriously consider, and by reason of it most strictly enforce compliance with statutory requirements, is that of jurisdiction as limited by the mandatory pro *229 visions as to time which the statutes impose. The reason therefor is made plain by Justice Fellows in Marr v. Railway, 228 Mich. 46, as follows:

“The legislative department in making the provisions it has (as to time) was doubtless prompted so to do in order to prevent unnecessary delay in bringing cases to this court for review and final decision. * * * Arguments on that question should be addressed to the legislature.”

The law now governing appeals in chancery under the judicature act and court rules is to be found in 3 Comp. Laws 1915, §§ 13754, 13755, Supreme Court Rule No. 61 (208 Mich, xxxvii), and Circuit Court Rule No. 66.

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Bluebook (online)
207 N.W. 842, 234 Mich. 224, 1926 Mich. LEXIS 553, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wernik-v-wayne-circuit-judge-mich-1926.