1 Pin. 165 | Wis. | 1842
The defendant in error moved the court to dismiss the writ of error herein for two reasons: “ 1st. The writ of error is prosecuted in the name of Doty alone, although the judgment which it was brought to reverse was against the said Doty, Jones and Irwin; 2d. The bond for supersedeas is informal and insufficiént.”
The record in this case from the district court of Dane county shows that at the November term of 1841 of said court, a judgment was rendered in favor of the said defendant in error, Strong, against the said plaintiff in error, James D. Doty, Alexander J. Irwin and David Jones. To reverse this judgment, Doty, plaintiff in error, one of the defendants against whom the said judgment was rendered, has prosecuted this writ of error separately from the other defendants in the judgment. The case, as it is now presented on the motion submitted, being thus correctly stated, the court will proceed to examine the merits of the motion to dismiss upon the grounds set forth.
It is not only a rule that no person, not, a party, can sue out a writ of error, but it is also a settled rule that it must be brought in the names of all the parties against whom the judgment is given : And, notwithstanding the death of any of the parties, though the survivors must bring the writ, he must still be named and his death must be alleged. And this is the rule, both that the writ of error may agree with the record, and to prevent vexation; for if each party may bring a writ, they might do it successively, to the great prejudice and delay of the plaintiff, who, in the opinion of the ablest jurists, cannot sue out execution against any one where a writ of error is awarded even on the application of the others. A writ of error, which in this respect is erroneous, may be quashed. Carth. 8; Ld. Raym. 71; Saund. 101, f.
When one of several defendants brings a writ of error in which the others are unwilling to join, he must do it in the name of all, and those who refuse to appear and assign errors must be summoned and severed, and then the writ of error must be proceeded in by the rest only,
To this general rule there is this obvious exception, that, if one of the defendants in an action of tort is acquitted, he need not be joined, because he cannot say that the judgment is to Ms damage; and, moreover, for the reason that he can never vex the plaintiff with another writ of error. The suit, however, should be described in the writ according to the record, and thus both objects of the law herein will be obtained. Saund. ubi sup.
In Folterall v. Floyd, 6 Serg. & R., this doctrine is fully recognized on full argument and reference to authorities. Hacket v. Horne, Carth. 7; Walter v. Stokoe, 1 Ld. Raym. 71; Brewer v. Turner, 1 Str. 233; Cooper v. Ginger, reported in 1 Str. 606, and Ld. Raym. 1403. And the principle decided in Hacket v. Horne is mentioned and acknowledged in the case of Knox v. Costello, 3 Burr. 1789.
The practice of summons and severance is not familiar to the American courts of error. The more easy and equally legitimate practice would be to enter a rule against those persons named in the writ of error as plaintiffs and not appearing, either to appear and assign error or submit to be severed. In any practice, however, all the defendants in the judgment must first join in suing out. the writ of error. We are of opinion, therefore, that the writ of error in this case be quashed for the first reason assigned in the motion of the defendant, without considering the second reason, which goes to the form and sufficiency of the bond, which it is not necessary to consider at this time.
At a subsequent day of the term the plaintiff moved the court for a rehearing.
The court could not, unless for extraordinary reasons, entertain this motion. The reason for entertaining the motion urged by counsel for the plaintiff is, “that a decision of the supreme court of the
We understand these to have been the reasons why the motion to dismiss was overruled. All the parties were before the court. They had separate grounds of defense, and the court below allowed them to sever in their answers. Judgment was awarded against all in solido, and separately for the whole amount against two of the defendants. They had both sued out a writ of error, and the motion should have been to consolidate. The parties had distinct grounds of error, and claimed distinct remedies. It was insisted in argument, that the case of Williams v. Bank, in 11 Cranch, was not applicable, because Williams alone took up the cause ; but in that case the court was understood to recognize the principle in practice, of summons and severance.
If the supreme court of the United States had decided that the practice of summons and severance was obsolete in reference to error in that court (which, however, they did not), still, if this court had entertained the practice, it never having been reversed by any judicial decision upon principle, it certainly would not have been treated as error by the supreme court.
Motion overruled.