30 Mich. 1 | Mich. | 1874
The plaintiff in error brought replevin against the defendant before a justice, for a quantity of lumber, and the defendant set up in defense that he took the lumber as deputy sheriff, on an execution issued on a justice’s judgment against Bigalow as garnishee of one Adam Howder. The justice gave judgment in the replevin suit in favor of Bigalow, and Barre then removed the cause by certiorari to the circuit court, where the judgment was reversed, and the lumber ordered to be returned. Thereupon Bigalow brought error to reverse this judgment of the circuit court.
If any of the objections taken to the proceedings before the justice were such as to warrant the judgment of reversal in the court below, the plaintiff in error cannot prevail, and we have therefore to consider ^whether the record discloses any ground of that kind. The main point depends on the rejection of two items of proof offered by defendant in error on the trial before the justice: First, the docket entry of the garnishee judgment; and second, the execution. It is claimed that the garnishee judgment was jurisdictionally invalid as against Bigalow. If that ground should be considered tenable, it would follow that the docket and execution were rightly excluded. If, however, the proceeding was merely irregular or erroneous, the rejection was wrong. It appears from the proof offered by Barre that Skinner, the plaintiff in the garnishee suit, had recovered judgment against his debtor, Howder, about a year before the garnishee proceeding was commenced against Bigalow, as Howder’s debtor, and hence that the indebtedness of the principal debtor, and which gave occasion to the institution of the garnishee suit, was an indebtedness under an existing judgment when the garnishee suit against Bigalow was commenced. And the docket entry of this garnishee suit, offered in evidence by Barre, shows that on the return day of the garnishee summons, Skinner, the plaintiff therein, and Bigalow, the garnishee, personally appeared before the
The offered proof imports that the justice obtained jurisdiction of the parties and had jurisdiction of the subject matter, and no such defect is discovered in the proceedings as would allow Bigalow to treat them as void.
He insists that, inasmuch as there was no declaration filed against him, or any second process to show cause, or any proof made of indebtedness, the judgment was invalid, as against him. But I think this is not so. The indebtedness of Howder to Skinner was already definitely fixed by judgment, and Bigalow explicitly admitted his indebtedness to Howder, and his liability as garnishee, and authorized the entry of judgment. He in effect waived declaration, second process and proofs, and as it appears to me, precluded himself from claiming that the judgment was void on the grounds suggested.
The judgment would seem to have slightly exceeded the sum named in Bigalow’s statement, but if there was anything improper in this, it was not, I think, a jurisdictional fault. It was something to be set right on error or appeal.
The execution was originally issued on the eleventh day of February, and was returned on the eleventh day of the succeeding April, wholly unsatisfied. Three days afterwards the justice renewed it for sixty days, and the seizure was made on the renewed writ.
The plaintiff claims that no renewal was proper after the expiration of the writ, and hence that the execution, as it was when the levy was made, was not of force for service. But I think this is not the correct construction of the statute in regard to renewals. When an execution is returned wholly or in part unsatisfied, the law allows the
I am, therefore, of opinion that the objections to the garnishee judgment and execution were not well founded, and if correct in this, it follows that the judgment of' the court below was right, and should be affirmed, with costs.-