Monaghan v. McKimmie
Monaghan v. McKimmie
Opinion of the Court
The plaintiff in error brought ejectment against the defendant in error, for a lot in Detroit. The issue was tried by jury, who found for defendant by direction of the court, and we hre asked to review the proceedings on writ of error and bill of exceptions. The bill of . exceptions contains some oral evidence and numerous pieces of documentary proof. Several points are stated in the brief; but the' only assignment of error is, that the court erred in requiring the jury to find for defendant. The record does not purport to contain all the evidence, and the assignment of error hardly indicates any special ground of objection.
In the notice of sale the defendant in execution iras described as Joseph A. MacÚunnia. In the other papers the name given was Joseph A. MacGimmie.
The sheriff’s deed bore date in 1874, and ran to James Monaghan, administrator of the estate of Nicholas Monaghan deceased.
The files and docket entries in the clerk’s office relating to the case were produced, but they did not disclose that any .affidavit of amount due, required by § 5383, Comp. L., was ever filed or indeed made, but the gentleman who officiated in 1872 as deputy clerk ivas produced as a witness, and, without any showing whatever that the affidavit had been searched for or was lost or destroyed, was allowed to swear' that an affidavit of amount due was brought to the office after the transcript was left, and that he filed it. He could not tell what it contained, or who made it, or the title of the case in which it was used, and no attempt was made to show what amount the affidavit stated to be due, or whether it stated any specific amount.
There was no other evidence to this i>oint, and this the defendant objected to and afterwards moved to strike out.
This proof was plainly incompetent, and the objection to it must bo allowed on this hearing where the plaintiff under-•fakes to show that she made, a case entitling her to recover.
The affidavit in question is required to authorize the clerk •to enter and docket the judgment, and it was essential to •show by some mode of legal evidence that the statute was •complied, with, in substance at. least, and this was not done. There are some other serious difficulties in the record, but
The judgment should be affirmed, with costs.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Rebecca Monaghan v. Joseph A. McKimmie
- Status
- Published