39 Mich. 484 | Mich. | 1878
Gage sued for his compensation as teacher in school district No.. 4 of Marathon. Two defenses were set up; first, of garnishee proceedings in which the district appeared and submitted to garnishment of the money due to Gage; and second, that
The garnishee statute relating to justices does not allow garnishee proceedings against municipal, corporations. Comp. L.¿ § 6468. A school district is very clearly such a corporation under our laws, as we decided in Seeley v. Board of Education, October term, 1876.
There is no force to the waiver of objection to the jurisdiction. The exemption really belongs to the person whose debt is garnished,' and not to the debtor. Johnson v. Dexter, 38 Mich., 695. The garnishee cannot without the debtor’s consent subject his rights to any unlawful burden.
In regard to deductions for holidays we are of opinion that school management should always conform
The judgment must be affirmed with costs.
Edwin R. Seedey v. The Board of Education of the City of Port Huron. — Error' Lo St. Clair. Submitted and decided October 25, 1876. .
Chadwick & Voorheis for plaintiff in error.
W. T. Mitchell for defendant in error.
Assumpsit by Seeley on appeal from the judgment of a justice of the peace in his favor. Defendant had appeared specially before the justice and objected to the jurisdiction on the ground that it was a municipal corporation. The circuit court reversed the judgment on the ground, as appears from the bill of exceptions and assignment of errors, that the defendant was a municipal corporation, and was not brought within the jurisdiction because service of summons was not made upon the proper officer, and was therefore fatally defective. Plaintiff brought error, and on the hearing in the Supreme Court it was claimed that the justice had no jurisdiction because the suit was against a municipal corporation, and the district was peculiarly incorporated and not within the statute which in some eases allows school districts to be sued before justices.
The Supreme Court affirmed the judgment of the Circuit, and held that the defendant was a municipal corporation as a school district, and that it was not within Comp. L., § 3681, which gives to justices jurisdiction in all cases of assumpsit, debt, covenant and trespass on the case against school districts where the amount claimed or the matter in controversy does not exceed $100.