14 Wis. 222 | Wis. | 1861
By the Court,
This was an action of replevin, commenced before a justice of the peace. The defendant appeared, and before answering moved to dismiss the suit, because tbe writ was returnable on the third day after it issued, not excluding a Sunday which intervened. The motion was denied, and the defendant excepted. He then answered and went to trial, and the plaintiff recovered judgment. The defendant appealed, and made the same objection in the circuit court, which was overruled and an exception taken.
We think the objection was good, and if properly taken advantage of, that the writ ought to have been quashed. The statute provides that the warrant “ shall be made returnable on the third day after it shall issue (Sundays excepted),” &c. R. S., chap. 120, sec. 134. It was contended by the respondent’s counsel that Sunday was only to be excepted when the third day fell on Sunday, and in support of this position he cited 7 Cow., 147; King vs. Dowdall, 2 Sandf. (S. C.), 131, and some other cases in New York, where it was held that intervening Sundays are to be included in the computation of statute time. But those were cases where
But although the objection was good, we think the defendant waived it in several ways. The record of the justice shows that the parties appeared by their counsel, which of course, in the absence of any qualification, must be construed to be a general appearance. And it is a familiar rule, that a general appearance waives any defect in the process. This is/ too well settled to need the citation of authorities. To avoid the effect of this rule, it is the common practice, when it is desired to take advantage of such defects, to appear special-] ly for that purpose only.
We also think the defendant could not take advantage of this objection on an appeal to the circuit court, the judgment being over $15. The object of an appeal in-such cases is to try the case anew in the appellate court on its merits, and not to review errors of the justice. The taking of such an appeal is equivalent to an appearance, and gives the appellate court jurisdiction over the person, whether the service of the process before the justice .was sufficient for that purpose or not. Barnum vs. Fitzpatrick, adm'r, &c., 11 Wis., 83, and cases cited. See also Hester vs. Murphy, 1 Ark., 55; Ball vs. Kuykendall, 2 id., 195; Ser vs. Bobst, 8 Mo., 506; Matlock vs. King, 23 id., 400. The remedy of the party in such a case would seem to be that pointed out in Wood vs. Randall, 5 Hill, 264, that is a common law certiorari.
We think also there was no error in the instructions of the circuit court in respect to the plaintiff’s right to the benefit of the exemption law. The statute makes no discrimination between temporary and permanent residents, nor does it purport to confine its priviléges to residents at all. It exempts certain articles of the debtor and his family. And we think it would be entirely inconsistent with the beneficent intentions of the statute as well as with the dignity of a sovereign state, to say that the temporary sojourner, or even the stranger within our gates, was not entitled to its protection.
The judgment is affirmed, with costs.