Lane v. Burdick

By' the Court,

Dixon, 0. J.

The first section of the act (chap*94ter 802, Laws of 1861) creating tbe municipal court of the city and town of Bipon, confers upon said court “jurisdiction in all civil actions, both as to matters of law and equity, equal to and commensurate with the circuit court for the county of Fond du Lac, within the city and town of Bipon.” Section five declares : “ The said municipal court shall have full power and authority to issue all legal and civil and criminal process proper and necessary to carry into effect the jurisdiction given it by this act; and, to carry out such jurisdiction, shall have and possess all the powers usually possessed by courts of record under the common law, under the limitations and regulations imposed by statutes.” Section seven :• “The rules of practice and proceedings of said municipal court shall conform, as near as practicable, to the rules of practice and proceedings of the circuit courts of this state. All laws conferring powers and jurisdiction or regulating the proceedings of circuit courts, or the judges thereof, incivil cases, are hereby extended to and over the municipal court and the judge thereof; so that the said municipal court and the j udge thereof may do and perform all acts, matters and things which may be done and performed by the circuit court of Fond du Lac county, or the judge thereof, in civil cases.” Section twelve: “ All the general provisions of the statutes of the state of Wisconsin, relating to the powers and duties of the circuit courts of this state, in civil cases, shall apply to the municipal court hereby established, as they now exist or as shall hereafter be provided for the circuit courts of this state.”

It is a settled rule in the circuit courts, that the plaintiff may select the court and name the county in which he will have the trial, and unless the defendant demand a change and cause the action to be removed, when the county named is not the proper one, the court has jurisdiction to proceed to trial and judgment. Such was the construction put upon the statute (sections 1, 2, 3 and 4, chap. 123, R. S.,) in Pereles vs. Albert, 12 Wis., 666. This action might, therefore, have been com*95menced in the circuit court for the county of Eond du Lac, and, without the demand, the jurisdiction would have been plenai-y and absolute. The same result follows in the municipal court, whose powers are declared to be commensurate with those of the circuit in all civil cases.

The fact that the jurisdiction of the municipal court must be exercised within the city and town, does not affect the question. So must that of the circuit court within the county, by the general law. The effect of the statute regulating the commencement of civil actions is, to give the circuit court of each county a kind of incipient jurisdiction throughout the state, and, with the assent of the parties, the power to hear and determine all such actions, without regard to the nature of the controversy or the residence of the litigants. The same jurisdiction and''power are extended to the municipal court by the act under consideration. The defendant, having failed, at the time and in the manner prescribed by law, to demand that the place of trial be changed, assented to the jurisdiction, and the objection by answer came too late, and was properly disregarded by the court.

The objection that the jurisdiction exceeds that of the circuit court, is not true. It may be equal, but does not exceed. And if giving the court an incipient jurisdiction over causes arising, or persons residing, without the municipality, be supposed to conflict with the constitution, the objection is answered in State ex rel. Stark vs. McArthur, 13 Wis., 383.

Judgment affirmed.