Carter v. Wyatt

Wisconsin Supreme Court
Carter v. Wyatt, 43 Wis. 570 (Wis. 1878)
Ryan

Carter v. Wyatt

Opinion of the Court

Ryan, C. J.

Sec. 45, chapt. 120, R. S., required a justice of the peace, upon return of process served, to wait an hour after the time of appearance specified in the process, for the actual appearance of the parties. This section was amended by chapt. 172 of 1875. The amended section requires a justice to be in his office at the return hour of process issued by him, and for the next succeeding hour, and, upon return of the process served, to call the case for trial at the hour specified in the process, but to wait the next succeeding hour for the appearance of the parties. Probably the only material change worked by the amendment is, that a justice must be in his office, as sitting in open court, during the hour of grace; so that parties may not have to wait for the justice, as the justice must wait for them.

The position is, however, understood to be taken here, that the amendment requires the process to be returned and the justice to call the case at the very hour named in the process; failing which, the justice loses jurisdiction. This court does not so understand the statute.

A justice of the peace takes jurisdiction of cases within it, upon issuing the proper process, though he does not acquire jurisdiction of the person of the defendant until the return of *573the process. The failure of the officer to return the process by the very hour named, cannot operate to abate the suit or to oust the jurisdiction of the justice. The justice ought to have power, and it appears to he given to him, to compel the return of his process. Secs. 4 and 219, chapt. 120, R. S. If he can compel return, he can await return without loss of jurisdiction. If he can await the return after the very hour named in the process, without loss of jurisdiction, he may wait beyond it to call the case. His calling the case at the very hour is perhaps made dependent upon the return of the process. So that he calls the case within the succeeding hour, the provision requiring him to call it at the very hour is directory only. Bacon v. Bassett, 19 Wis., 45; Nett v. Serwe, 28 id., 663.

"What would he the power or duty of a justice, if his process should not he returned hy the officer within the next hour after the time at which it is returnable, is a question not now before the court. It is enough to hold here that the statute appears to suspend time for an hour after that specified for the return of the process; giving justice, constable and parties tempus rei gerendce, a long hour by Shrewsbury clock. So that within the hour the process be returned served and the justice call the case, no difficulty appears to arise in the exercise of the justice’s jurisdiction either of the case or of the person of the defendant.

The particular difficulty suggested in this case is, that though the officer actually returned his process to the justice, actually served, within the hour succeeding the time specified for its return, yet he did not indorse his written return on it, until after the hour’s grace had expired. And it is contended that, after the hour, the authority of the justice to receive the return, and his jurisdiction of the case and of the defendant, were gone. This court cannot hold so. As already remarked, the jurisdiction of the justice of the suit is not dependent on the promptness of the return, and would survive failure of re*574turn within the hour. ITis calling the case within the hour, to await or compel a return, would keep his jurisdiction alive beyond the hour. Rut here the officer’s actual return of the process within the hour, and his indorsement of the service after the hour, constituted one continuing act; the prolongation of the act beyond the hour neither defeated nor suspended the justice’s jurisdiction; and the written return was as effectual for all purposes as if it had been complete within the hour.

Justices of the peace take limited jurisdiction by prescribed modes of proceeding, and are held strictly to them. But the strictness of practice to which they are held must be reasonable. The objections urged in this case against the justice’s judgment are unreasonably and unwarrantably technical, and cannot be sustained.

By the Gowrt. — The judgment of the circuit court is reversed, and the cause remanded with directions to affirm the judgment of the justice.

Reference

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Published