Schweppe v. Wellauer

76 Wis. 19 | Wis. | 1890

ObtoN, J.

There are two appeals,— one from the order of the circuit court dismissing the appeal from the justice, and the other from the order denying the motion of the defendants for a change of the place of trial. No one seems to know the ground for the dismissal of the appeal. The learned counsel of the respondent contends that the appeal was properly dismissed, because the appeal papers were wrongly entitled, so far as the defendants were concerned, and because the name of the garnishee was appended. The name of the garnishee being appended was mere surplusage, and should have been disregarded. Co. Litt. 303b; Dean v. Gover, 2 Saund. 306, and note 14; Thomas v. Roosa, 7 Johns. 462; Chapman v. Smith, 13 *21Johns. 80; Tucker v. Randall, 2 Mass. 283; Wilmarth v. Mountford, 8 Serg. & R. 124; Carroll v. Peake, 1 Pet. 18; Brown v. Manter, 21 N. H. 535.

There appears to be some discrepancy in the title of the defendants. The summons, garnishee proceedings, record, and judgment before the justice are against Jacob Wellauer-c& Go., and the account filed as the cause of action is against Jacob Wellauer c& Go. The notice of appeal from the justice, the affidavit, and undertaking are against Jacob Wel-lauer, John Hoffman, and Alexander Hehr. In the motion of the defendants for change of venue, and all the proceedings in the circuit court on appeal, all three of the defendants constituting the firm of Jacob Wellauer & Go. are named. The order dismissing the appeal, and the plaintiff’s notice of trial in the circuit court, are against Jacob Wel-lauer eb al. The affidavit and demand for a change of venue are made on behalf of all three defendants; and, finally, all proceedings since the judgment of the justice have been either against Jacob Wellauer et al. or all three of the defendants. The only discrepancy is that the complaint before the justice was against Jacob Wellauer and John Hoffman alone. The defendants probably knew who constituted their firm of Jacob Wellauer <& Go. better than the plaintiff; and they have, since the judgment, appeared in all of the three names of their firm. There is perfect accord between such title and that of the summons and proceedings before the justice of Jacob Wellauer d¿ Go. The defendants had the right to appear by their own proper names of the firm, as they have so appeared, and since then the records have been properly entitled against them all. “Where the several members of the partnership are unknown to the plaintiff, the suits and all proceedings majr be in the partnership name until the true names of the several partners are discovered, whereupon the subsequent proceedings shall be in the true names of the parties.” Sec. 2612a, S. & B. Ann. *22Stats. The proceedings are perfectly regular, notwithstanding the mistake made by the plaintiff in drawing his complaint against only two of the firm. It should have been against the partnership name, according to the records of the justice; for he evidently did not know all of the names of the partners, and they had not been previously discovered. There was no ground for the dismissal of the appeal.

The motion for a change of venue was denied because the appeal had been dismissed and the court had no jurisdiction of the case after that.

By the Court.— The order dismissing the appeal and the order denying the change of venue are both reversed, and the cause remanded for further proceedings according to law.

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