Lacher v. Will

6 Wis. 282 | Wis. | 1858

By ihe Court,

Cole. J.

This suit was instituted under chapter 120 E. S., to enforce a mechanic's lien. The petition of the defendant in error was filed on the 12th of July, 1856, in the office of the clerk of the circuit court for Dane county, setting forth that the petitioner was a house carpenter and joiner; and ^hat between the first day of December, 1855, and the 1st day of July, 1856, as such carpenter and joiner, at the request of the plaintiff in error, Lachcr, he performed work and labor upon, and furnished material for, the construction of a dwelling house and other buildings of Lachcr, situated upon certain lots in the city of Madison, and claiming the benefit of the statute in reference to mechanic’s lien. The declaration was filed <tn the 3d of November following, the first day of the term, consisding of two counts. The first count appears to contain all the avermen's and facts necessary to enable a party to recover in this proceeding. The seco id count is simply an indJiitaius assumjjsii count. The plaintiff' in trior made no *285appearance to the action. On (be 5ih of November, tbe third day of the term to which the summons was returnable, the default of ihe plaintiff in error was entered for not appearing, and the next day a rule taken for interlocutory judgment, and that a writ of inquiry issue. The damages were assessed by a jury drawn from the regular panel, in the presence of the court, and judgment rendered that the defendant in error recover of the plaintiff in error his damages assessed, with costs, and that the damages and costs should bo a lien upon the dwelling house and other buildings, and upon ihe right, tide and inter est of the plaintiff in eiror, in and to the lots upon which the buildings were situated and which ho had upon the 1st of July, 1856.

Several objections are now taken to this judgment, and to the regularity of the proceedings in the court below. First, it is insisted that the judgment should be reveised, because the declaration contained one bad count, — the indibitaius assump-sit count — and that the damages were assessed upon the whole declaration. There can be no doubt but the second count of this declaration was bad, according to the previous decisions of this court in the cases of Dewey vs. Fifield, 2 Wis. 73, Dean and Ruggles vs. Wheeler, Id. 224 — and did it satisfactorily appear that the jury assessed the damages upon the whole declaration, the objection would be fatal. The counsel for the defendant in error, contends that the second count was stricken out, on motion, before the assessment of damages; and although the record upon this point is a little confused, yet we think it does appear fiom it, that such was the case. That objection therefore is not sustained by the record. Again it is insisted that it was error to enter the default of Lacker on the second day after the declaration was filed, and that such a practice is contrary to law and the rules of court. It. is said that as Lacker was personally served with summons, by section 12, chap. 90 R. S., he must be considered in court, and by Rule 8 (pide circuit rules), was entitled to twenty days notice to plead al'er filing declaration, before his default could be properly entered. It is true that Rule 8 in substance provides, lliat when there *286shall be an appearance of a party or service of notice of retainer before the end of the return day of the writ, or before default actually entered pursuant to statute, that tben be shall be entitled to twenty days after service of notice to plead, answer, or demur. The appearance contemplated by this rule is the common and usual appearance to an action, that is, when a defendant by some act places himself before the court in which the suit was commenced. In actions at law an appearance is effected by putting in sufficient bail, where the action requires bail, or in non-bailable actions, by endorsing on the process served a memorandum authorizing the clerk to enter an appearance, or in some cases, by filing common bail. 1 Tidd’s Pr. 238, 240. Archb. Prac. 71; 1 Burrill's Prac. 106. But the defendant does some act to place himself before the court. And, by section 12 before cited, must be understood that when a summons has been personally served upon the defendant he is to be considered in court for the purposes of the action, and can be proceeded against to final judgment. Sec. 1 chap. 101 R. S., provides that when any defendant being duly served with process, shall fail to appear, his default shall be recorded, and the charge in the declaration taken to be true, and judgment shall be rendered accordingly, evidently intended to meet a case like the one at bar.

But it is objected that the writ of inquiry was improperly executed; the damages having been assessed by a jury in the presence of the court. We are entirely clear that it is competent for the circuit courts, if they are disposed to take upon themselves that duty, to have writs of inquiry executed before them by a jury as well where there are no issues of fact as where there are. It is admitted that an inquest might be taken in this way by rule 16, (circuit court rules), where there are issues of fact- and no sufficient affidavit of merits have been filed and served. We can see no good reason why the writ of inquiry should not be executed before the court when there are no issues of fact, and we believe the practice has been at the circuits, for the court to assess the damages in such cases by the intervention of a jury, when the clerk was not author*287ized to assess them. It is further insisted that the judgment is erroneous for not following the declaration in the description of the premises sought to be encumbered by the lien. Also, for that it not only establishes a lien upon the interest of the defendant in the premises, but upon the premises themselves.

We do not think the variance between the premises as set forth in the declaration and judgment at all material, and the judgment distinctly limits the lien, upon the lots, to the rights, title, and interest of the plaintiff in error therein.

We see no error in the proceedings of the circuit court; the judgment is therefore affirmed with costs.