Milwaukee Harvester Co. v. Teasdale

Wisconsin Supreme Court
Milwaukee Harvester Co. v. Teasdale, 91 Wis. 59 (Wis. 1895)
64 N.W. 422; 1895 Wisc. LEXIS 15
Newman

Milwaukee Harvester Co. v. Teasdale

Opinion of the Court

NewmaN, J.

Objections which are taken in this court for the first time are not favored. Often the defect complained of may be obviated if objection is made in the trial court. When made in this court for the first time, a liberal presumption will be extended in aid of the proceeding assailed. When the defect complained of is a mere irregularity or is amendable it will be deemed to have been waived or amended. So, in favor of the judgment of the circuit court, and especially after the appearance and trial without objection in that court, it will be presumed, where the record is silent, that the action Avas duly brought into that court by a sufficient process duly served. Sommermeyer v. Schwartz, 89 Wis. 66. There is authority which seems to hold that the defects complained of are of such gravity and seriousness, if their existence is established, as to be fatal to the action, either in the trial court or in this court. Talbot v. White, 1 Wis. 444. But their existence is not affirmatively shoAvn by the record and is not to be presumed.

The cause Avas adjourned in justice’s court to a day Avhich afterivards, by appointment of the governor, became a legal holiday. On that holiday it Avas adjourned to the next day. On that next day, and without the consent or waiver of the defendants, the plaintiff proceeded in the case and took judgment. It is claimed, and the circuit court so held, that the judgment is void. This is on, the ground that the justice had no poAver to move in the case on a legal holiday. The statute (sec. 2576, S. & B. Ann. Stats.) provides: “No court shall be opened or transact any business . . .* on *62any legal holiday, unless it be for the purpose of instructing or discharging a jury, or of receiving a verdict and rendering a judgment thereon.” “ No court shall be opened.” It needs no argument to show that, in face of this prohibition, there could be no court, even if the justice and all parties were present and consenting. Whatever should be done would be strictly cor own nonjudioe and void. “ Or transact any business.” It is doubly prohibited. The adjournment of a cause is the transaction of business. It is business which can be done only by a court. It is judicial business, being addressed to the judgment and discretion of a court. It is a very common proceeding in a cause. It is to put off or defer to another day. To “ hold open ” to another day is but another name for the same thing. And there is no provision that matters pending in a justice’s court shall be deemed continued over the holiday to the next day, as is provided for courts of record. Ilid. This statute makes some exceptions from its general prohibition. It mentions some things which may be done by a court upon a holiday. The legislature might have added to these exceptions, “ or to adjourn a cause.” But it has made, no such exception, and the court cannot make it. The exceptions named ascertain the rule. Nothing can be done by a court upon a holiday except the things which are expressly excepted from the prohibition. An action in justice’s court Avhich has been adjourned to a legal holiday must necessarily fall. But it would seem that this condition of the law need lead to no practical difficulty. The time of the thanksgiving holiday is, practically, as definitely fixed as Christmas or the Fourth of July, in advance of the proclamation. It has been the custom, not departed from in many years, to set apart for thanksgiving the last Thursday in November in each year. So that it can be foreseen with practical certainty that that day will be a nonjudicial day.

By the Court. — The judgment of the circuit co urt is affirmed.

Reference

Full Case Name
The Milwaukee Harvester Company v. Teasdale and another
Cited By
3 cases
Status
Published