Gorton v. Bailey

Taylob, J.

The record shows that' both plaintiffs and defendant noticed the cause for trial at the February term of the court, 1878, and mutually accepted service of such notice. *636The cause was placed on tlie calendar for said term, and remained thereon without objection for the entire term. The defendant, having himself noticed the case for trial at the February term, and permitted the same to remain on the calendar for the whole of said term without moving to strike it therefrom, is, we think, estopped from now insisting that it was not regularly noticed. The return of the justice had been made and filed before the term commenced, and consequently the court had jurisdiction of the action. The only question is, whether it was properly put upon the calendar. That the case could have been properly placed upon the calendar by stipulation of the parties, there can be no doubt; and the mutual notices of trial are, we think, equivalent to such stipulation. This court has so held, under rule 11, upon the subject of putting cases upon the calendar of this court. We are inclined to hold that the case was properly placed upon the calendar for trial at the February term.

If the action was properly noticed for trial at the February term, then there was no necessity for any notice for the May term (sec. 216, ch. 120, R. S. 1858), and it was properly on the calendar for that term, and the court was right in refusing to strike it from the calendar at that term. But if this be not so, we have no doubt the defendant waived the irregularity of the notice of trial by afterwards moving a reference of the case, and going to trial before the referee upon the merits. It does not appear that the defendant was in any way prejudiced by the refusal to strike the case from the calendar. Had he been forced to trial at the May term, he might have insisted, perhaps, with some plausibility, that, relying upon the irregularity, he had not prepared for a trial upon the merits. This is the only injury he could have suffered by the refusal, and not having suffered that or any other apparent injury, his going to trial upon the merits must be considered a wraiver of the irregularity, and the- judgment ought not to be reversed for that cause. It is clearly one of those errors or defects in *637the proceedings -which should be disregarded, as provided in § 2829, R. S. 1878. Jones v. Parish, 1 Pin., 494; Green v. Gilbert, 21 Wis., 395; Pinger v. Vanclick, 36 Wis., 141; Pier v. Storm, 37 Wis., 247; Bonnell v. Gray, 36 Wis., 574. This case comes within the principle of the case of Barker v. Life Ins. Co., 24 Wis., 635. In that case Justice Paine says: “ If a party wishes to stand upon the objection that he is not in court, he must keep out, except for the purpose of raising that question. It would give him an unjust advantage, to allow him, after such a motion had been ruled against him, to go into court for all the purposes of a trial on the merits, in which, if he "obtained a judgment, it would be valid in his favor, but in which, if the other party should obtain a judgment, and the service of process had been defective, he could inevitably reverse it upon the ground that he had never got into court at all.”

The case at bar is stronger against the appellant than the one above cited. In that case the plaintiff claimed he had never been brought into court at all; in this the appellant admits he was properly in court, but that he was not properly notified of the time and place of trial. If a party cannot take advantage of an objection that the court has no jurisdiction over him, if, when such objection is ruled against him, he proceeds to trial on the merits, there does not seem to be any reason why he should be permitted to take advantage of the objection that he had not proper notice of the time and place of trial, when he afterwards goes to trial on the merits, and does not show affirmatively to the court that he was prejudiced by the irregularity. If a party, relying upon a want of proper notice of trial, had not prepared for trial, and the court, after having denied his motion to strike the same from the calendar for that cause, had forced him to trial without giving time for preparation, we are not prepared to say that the irregularity would be waived by the fact that such party had proceeded to try the case on the mei-its. This case presents no such circumstances. *638It presents in fact no stronger case in favor of the defendant than would have been presented had the court continued the action on his motion, after the motion to strike from the calendar had been denied, and the case had been properly noticed and tried at a subsequent term. In such case there would clearly be no reason for reversing the judgment.

The case of Demming v. Weston, 15 Wis., 236, is not in conflict with the foregoing opinion. In that case, it appears, there was a motion to strike the case from the calendar because the same had not been properly noticed; and it also appears that the case was tried at the same term at which such motion was made. It does not, however, appear from the statement of the case, that the defendant took part in the trial on the merits, after his motion to dismiss was denied. The case had not been noticed by the defendant, and had been irregularly noticed by the plaintiff. So that the question whether the defendant had waived the irregularity by noticing the case himself, was not in the case. There does not seem to have been any point made, that the irregularity was waived by going to trial on the merits after the motion was overruled. All that is said on the subject by the late Chief Justice Dixon, who delivered the opinion, is, that a notice of trial in a case which has been appealed from a justice’s court cannot regularly be given until after the return of the justice is filed with the clerk of the appellate court, and for that reason the case should have been stricken from the calendar. He then goes on to state that the findings in the case were so imperfect that no judgment could be regularly entered thereon, and the judgment is ordered reversed for the reasons stated. All that case determines is, that the plaintiff cannot regularly place a case appealed from a justice’s court upon the calendar of the appellate court for trial, by a notice given before the return of the justice is filed, without the consent and against the objection of the defendant. The questions, whether it can be so put upon the calendar by the consent of the defendant, and whether such *639consent waives the irregularity, are not discussed or decided; nor the question whether the- defendant does not waive the irregularity if, after his motion to dismiss, he goes to trial upon the merits, at the same or some subsequent term of the court, unless he shows that he has been in fact prejudiced by such irregularity.

As the record shows that the appellant had ample opportunity to prepare for and try his case upon the merits, and did so try the same after the denial of his motion to strike the case from the calendar, the irregularity in the manner of noticing the same for trial, if there was any, was waived, and the judgment must be affirmed.

By the Court. — The judgment of the county court is affirmed.

Ryan, O. J., took no part.