65 Wis. 6 | Wis. | 1885
The facts set forth in the foregoing statement of the case were found’ substantially by the circuit court,
It was maintained by counsel for the defendant that, because the plaintiff has not appealed from the award of the commissioners, he cannot recover in the circuit court any greater sum than the commissioners awarded him, which was $308. Y0. We. do not concur in this proposition. The appeal of the defendant alone necessitated a trial de novo in the circuit court of the whole controversy. The award of the commissioners thereupon ceased to be of any importance, and the parties stood in that court as they stood before the commissioners. Had the award- been admitted. in evidence to show the sum awarded by the commissioners, it would probably have been error. Central Bank of Wis. v. St. John, 17 Wis. 157. The matter stood in the circuit court precisely as a case appealed from a justice of the peace where a trial de novo is required by law. Undoubtedly, in
Counsel for defendant based an argument in support of his position on sec. 4037, E. S., which provides that the eir-cuit court may, on appeal from an order of the county court, reverse or affirm the same, in whole or in part, etc. Many orders of the county court are of a character that only admits of a reversal or affirmance on appeal. Others, like the award here, may require something more than a mere reversal or affirmance, either in whole or in part. The same section gives the circuit court ample authority to make the proper order or render the proper judgment in such cases, without regard to the amount awarded by the commissioners.
"We conclude that the circuit court rendered the proper judgment, and hence that it should not Be disturbed.
By the Gourt.— Judgment affirmed.