57 P. 627 | Or. | 1899
delivered the opinion of the court.
This is a special proceeding to review the judgment of a justice’s court of Harney County. The transcript shows that plaintiff commenced an action against the defendant in the Justice’s Court of Burns District, to recover the sum of $2.50, alleged to be due on account of the sale and delivery of certain goods, wares, and merchandise. The answer, after denying the material allegations of the complaint, sets up a counterclaim of $34.17, and, the reply having put in issue the allegations of new matter therein, the venue was changed, upon defendant’s motion, to the Justice’s Court of Harney District, where the parties stipulated that the cause should be continued, and at the trial thereof judgment was rendered for the defendant -in the sum of $7.50. The circuit court of said county having issued a writ to review said judgment, the return showed the facts as hereinbefore stated ; whereupon the court found that the affidavit for a change of venue was insufficient to authorize a transfer of the cause, annulled the judgment, and remanded the cause to the court in which it was commenced, with directions to try the same, and -from this judgment the defendant appeals.
The only question to be considered is whether the Justice’s Court of Harney District had jurisdiction of the action. Defendant’s counsel maintain that, conceding the affidavit to be insufficient to authorize a transfer of the cause, plaintiff, by his appearance and stipulation in said court, waived all defects in the previous proceedings, and, judgment having been rendered against him, the court erred in setting it aside. In Moore v. Wabash Ry. Co., 51 Mo. App. at p. 504, the venue was changed against the defendant’s exception, notwithstanding which he appeared in the court to which the cause was sent and went to trial without objection, and it was held that,
In Magmer v. Renk, 65 Wis. 364 (27 N. W. 26), it was held that if, after a cause is removed from one justice’s court to another, the parties appear before the latter, and proceed to trial without objection, all questions of