Mercer v. Lowell National Bank
Mercer v. Lowell National Bank
Opinion of the Court
A suit in attachment was brought by defendant in error against the plaintiff in error before one Robert Hunter, a justice of the peace in the township of Lowell, in Kent county, the writ being returnable on the 21st day of July, 1873, at which time the parties appeared before the justice, the plaintiff filed his declaration, and the defendant pleaded the general issue verbally, and reserved the right to file written notice of special matters of defense within three days; and on motion of defendant the cause was adjourned to the 25th July, at 9 o’clock A. M.
In the meantime, after the service of the attachment, and before the return day, viz.: on the 17th day of July, said Mercer, defendant in the attachment, had made application to a circuit court commissioner of the county, at Grand Rapids, for a dissolution of the attachment as provided by the statute, the hearing of which was fixed by the
Such was the position of the two cases (the attachment before the justice and the application for its dissolution before the commissioner), when, on the 35th July, the day to which the cause before the justice had been adjourned, the parties appeared before the justice, and the defendant applied for an adjournment of the cause for two weeks, and made an affidavit as the basis of his motion, showing that he was unable to proceed to the trial of the cause, on account of the absence of material and necessary witnesses, whose attendance he was unable to procure, and also showing diligence in the attempt to procure service of subpoena upon one of the witnesses, and his failure to procure it. But the justice, before he would grant any continuance, required the defendant to state by further affidavit what he expected to prove by such absent witness, which he did, and asked for the adjournment for two weeks. But the justice refused to grant it for the two weeks as requested, but granted an adjournment to the first day of August at 9 o’clock A. M., the same day and hour to which the hearing of the application before the commissioner had already been adjourned, he being aware of that fact. And the affidavit presented by the defendant for the adjournment asked for on August 1st, which is a part of the affidavit for the certiorari in this case, states, and it was substantially admitted upon the argument here, and is fairly enough inferable from the counter affidavit of
On the 1st day of August, however, the defendant himself being present at the hearing before the commissioner at Grand Rapids, appeared by attorney before the justice, and moved for an adjournment of three weeks upon an affidavit made by the defendant the 30th July, and presented and filed on the 1st August, setting forth the facts already stated in reference to the adjournment from July 25th to August 1st, and in reference to the time fixed for the hearing by the commissioner, the necessity of defendant’s being present at the hearing before the commissioner,
In opposition to this motion for an adjournment, and in reply to the affidavit of the defendant, the attorney for the plaintiff below made his own counter affidavit and filed it before the justice, stating that he had appeared for the plaintiff and was present when the cause was adjourned on the 25th July upon the defendant’s motion and affidavit, “ and that there was no showing hy affidavit or any other legal manner, informing the court at that time that there was any reason why said suit should not be adjourned to this 1st of August,” thus, by implication, admitting all the defendant had stated in his affidavit as to the information given to the justice on the 25th, about the hearing to be had before the commissioner at the same hour on the 1st, and that the defendant could not be present before the justice, etc., and admitting, as the justice himself admits in the return, that the defendant on the 25 th requested an adjournment for two weeks, which he refused, and granted one only to the 1st of August, at the same hour as the hearing of the matter before the commissioner. The counter affidavit also states that defendant did not show by affidavit that these witnesses had been subpoenaed to appear
The adjournment being denied, defendant’s attorney abandoned the case, and the justice, upon such proof as the plaintiff saw fit to introduce, rendered judgment against defendant for three hundred dollars damages and sixty-four dollars and thirty-five cents costs, which was removed to the circuit court for Kent county by certiorari, and being there affirmed, is brought to this court by writ of error.
The counsel for defendant in error insists that, as neither the adjournment of the 25th July nor the refusal of that asked on the 1st of August was a first adjournment (or an application for such), the question in each instance was one of discretion for the justice to determine, and that his judgment cannot be reversed unless it appears to the court that his action was a clear abuse of that discretion ; and that, whatever may in this respect be the view of the court, as to the adjournment from July 25th to August 1st, the judgment cannot be reversed for any abuse of the justice’s discretion as to that adjournment from July 25th to August 1st, as the error assigned relates only to the refusal of the justice to grant the adjournment applied for on the 1st of August, and the decision of the circuit court in holding that refusal 'legal and valid. And that as to the refusal of the justice to grant that adjournment there was no error,
It is not necessary in such a case to determine whether a party clearly showing a good cause for any adjournment after the first, is entitled to it as a matter of right, so that its refusal would be error for which the judgment should be reversed, or whether- it is a matter within the judicial discretion of the justice; but assuming, for the purposes of this case, that the fixing of the time for the adjournment granted on the 25 th July, and the question of granting that applied for on the first of August, were matters within the judicial discretion of the justice, we are satisfied that no such judicial discretion was exercised on either occasion, but that his action upon both occasions, whether the result of ignorance of his powers or duties, or from some other cause, was a gross and palpable abuse of such discretion, and that, to speak in the mildest terms, as the object of the law is to secure to parties the opportunity for a fair trial, to sanction such abuses, from whatever cause or motive arising,
The judgment of the circuit court and that of the justice must be reversed, and the plaintiff in error must recover his costs in this court and the circuit court, including the costs paid the justice on the removal of the cause from that court.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- William Mercer v. The Lowell National Bank
- Cited By
- 1 case
- Status
- Published