13 Wis. 175 | Wis. | 1860
By the Court,
The motion of the plaintiff in error (defendant below), to dismiss the suit because no proper summons had been issued and served, was properly overruled. The summons was in strict compliance with sections two and three of chapter 124 of the Revised Statutes. Those sections do not require that it shall be tested in the name
Upon the merits of the present controversy, were we permitted to decide upon the facts as they appear to us from the record, we are free to acknowledge that we should come to very different conclusions from those arrived at by the jury. The record discloses many gross and palpable circumstances of fraud, and it is probable that few verdicts are found upon testimony of a more doubtful character. Still, if the witness Mack is to be believed, (and of his credibility the jury, not we, are the judges), it cannot be said that the verdict is entirely unsupported by evidence. The jury have found that he was worthy of credit, and that he testified truthfully. His testimony tends directly, and we may say fully, to sustain the verdict. We cannot therefore set it aside, or reverse the judgment for want of evidence. We cannot interfere with what was so clearly and peculiarly within the province of the jury. We cannot reverse the judgment be-
The motion for a nonsuit was properly denied, for reasons already stated. There was evidence, tending to support the action of the plaintiff, which ought to have been submitted to the jury.
The objection to the first question put to the witness Bra-ley, was improperly sustained. It is very clear that parol evidence of the fact that a suit between the parties named had been instituted before the witness as police justice, was admissible, for until it had thus been shown to the court that there was such a suit, it was impossible for the court to say that there was a record, and direct its production. But no injury resulted from this ruling, as the whole matter of the evidence given on the trial of that action was afterwards freely investigated. The defect was therefore cured, and the judgment cannot be reversed on account of it.
Judgment affirmed.