DocketNumber: Calendar No. 28,703
Citation Numbers: 205 Mich. 205
Judges: Bird, Brooke, Kuhn, Moore, Ostrander, Steere, Stone
Filed Date: 4/3/1919
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 9/8/2022
(dissenting). A bill was filed in the circuit court for the county of Berrien in chancery by Clayton M. Niles as guardian of George F. Sonner, an incompetent, to set aside a contract made with petitioner upon the grounds of mental incapacity and undue influence. Answer was filed putting in issue the allegations of the bill. Before a hearing, and before
In the case of Brown v. Kalamazoo Circuit Judge, 75 Mich. 274 (5 L. R. A. 226, 13 Am. St. Rep. 438), this court had before it the validity of Act No. 267, Pub. Acts 1887, which provided for a trial by jury in equity cases and made the verdict of the jury final as to the facts. This court there held such act in conflict with the Constitution, and in the course of the opinion written by Mr. Justice Campbell, it was said:
“The system of chancery jurisprudence has been developed as carefully and as judiciously as any part of the legal system, and the judicial power includes it, and always, must include it. Any change which transfers the power that belongs to a judge to a jury, or to any other person or body, is as plain a violation of the Constitution as one which should give the courts executive or legislative power vested elsewhere. The cognizance of equitable questions belongs to the judiciary as a part of the judicial power, and under our Constitution must remain vested where it always has been vested heretofore.”
The relator in the instant case therefore comes to this court armed with the right to an adjudication of his case in a court of equity and in accordance with the practice of that division of the judicial department. Is the order here reviewed in accordance with the practice on the equity side of the court as adopted and fixed in this State?
That “feigned issues” were known to the equity courts of England, and that issues of fact arising on the equity side of the court may be submitted to juries under our practice may be taken as well understood by the profession. Indeed, our own statute (3 Comp. Laws 1915, § 12593) permits such practice. This statute is the substantial re-enactment of a statute
“An issue, indeed, might have been directed; but we do not think it a case in which this course ought to have been pursued. The degree of weakness, or of imposition, which ought to induce a court of, chancery to set aside a conveyance, is proper for the consideration of the court itself; and there seems to be no reason for the intervention of a jury, unless the case be one in which the court would be satisfied with the verdict, however it might be found.”
How, then, may it be determined that the conscience of the chancellor needs the aid of the finding of a jury of laymen? By an inspection of the pleadings? Most
“An issue is directed where an incidental question of fact is so involved in doubt by conflicting or insufficient evidence that the court, considering the inefficiency of written testimony, is desirous of referring it to the verdict of a jury. It can, however, only be . adopted where the evidence creates a doubt, and not as a substitute for omitted evidence; and, therefore, the party claiming the issue must first prove his case by regular depositions.”
In Fletcher’s Equity Pleading and Practice, § 618, it is said:
“If the court is not satisfied upon the proofs which have been taken as to the truth of the case, it may direct a feigned issue to ascertain the facts. As a general rule, it has, however, the power of determining all questions of fact without resorting to this mode of inquiry, and it should not be employed except where the conflict of witnesses or the obscurity of evidence is such as to make it doubtful on which side the preponderance of evidence lies.”
And Justice Campbell in the early case of Dunn v. Dunn, supra, speaking of the chancery judge, said:
“He cannot properly award an issue until he has*209 been unable to form a satisfactory conclusion on the hearing, up.on some material facts, to which the issue must be legally confined.”
The Dunn Case was written 56 years ago. It has not been modified by our later holdings, and is not modified by Maier v. Wayne Circuit Judge, 112 Mich. 491, which is relied upon by counsel for respondent. It will be noted from an examination of that case that another statute was there involved. We have examined the original files in that case. They show that the relator there insisted upon two propositions: (1) assuming the validity of the statute under consideration its provisions had been waived; (2) the act was invalid under Brown v. Kalamazoo Circuit Judge, supra. The reply to these contentions was that there had been no waiver, and that the jurisdiction of the chancery court over the subject-matter there involved was statutory and the practice could be regulated by statute. The order of the respondent in that case had made the finding of the jury controlling. This was held to be improper. Upon the question of whether the case was controlled by Brown v. Kalamazoo Circuit Judge, supra, it was said:
“We are satisfied that this case is within the general jurisdiction of equity, and therefore clearly within the reason of Brown v. Kalamazoo Circuit Judge, supra, although we do not mean to' intimate that the result would not be the same were the cause one which only came within the jurisdiction by virtue of a statute.”
But the question there before the court was not the question in the instant case, i. e., when may the discretion of the chancellor be exercised, and upon what must it rest for its foundation? That case in no way militates against what was said in Dunn v. Dunn, supra. Under the holding in the Dunn Case, the dis
It follows that the writ should be granted.