
    Ella Rawson v. Joseph W. McElvaine.
    
      Justice’s return to certiora/ñ — Surplusage in verdict
    
    
      A justice’s return that “ the foregoing contains about all the testimony ” will not justify a review oE the evidence by the Supreme Court to see whether it sustained the judgment.
    
      A justice’s return to a writ of ceriiora/ri must be taken as conclusive in matters of evidence even as against the affidavit for the writ.
    
      Where a purchaser of goods has left them with the vendor and the latter recovers judgment for their value, the force of the verdict is not destroyed by the additional direction that plaintiff deliver them to defendant. This merely states the legal consequence of the judgment and may be rejected as surplusage.
    Error to Kalamazoo.
    Submitted. June 22.
    Decided October 11.
    Assumpsit. Defendant brings error.
    Affirmed.
    
      Howard & Boos for appellant,
    urged that it was error to render judgment on the verdict: Burhans v. Tibbits 7 How. Pr. 21; Glass v. Blair 4 Penn. St. 196 ; Patterson v. United States 2 Wheat. 221; Moore v. Devol 14 Iowa 112 ; Wallace v. Hilliard 7 Wis. 627; Ford v. Ford 3 Wis. 399.
    
      Dallas Boudeman for appellee.
    When the testimony is not all returned the court will not reverse the judgment; it will be presumed that there was sufficient evidence on all points: Gaines v. Betts 2 Doug. (Mich.) 98; Berry v. Lowe 10 Mich. 8; Hyde v. Nelson 11 Mich. 353 ; Welch v. Bagg 12 Mich. 41; Parsons v. Dickinson 23 Mich. 57; Overpack v. Ruggles 27 Mich. 65 ; Smoke v. Jones 35 Mich. 409; M. & P. R. M. Co. v. Morgan 41 Mich. 296; where the jury find the issue, and something more, the latter part .of the finding will be rejected as surplusage : O’Brien v. Palmer 49 Ill. 72; Windham v. Williams 27 Miss. 313; Hilliard on New Trials p. 107-8, § 19; Rambo v. Wyatt’s Admr. 32 Ala. 363; Patterson v. Allen 50 Tex. 23; surplus-age in a verdict which does not clearly show that a jury reasoned incorrectly, or from false premises, does not vitiate it: Gregory v. Frothingham 1 Nev. 253 ; and a court has the power to put a verdict in form, if its meaning and effect is not thereby changed: Armstrong v. Pierson 15 Iowa 476 ; Corbett v. Gilbert 24 Ga. 454; Sleight v. Henning 12 Mich. 371.
   Maeston, J.

This cause was tried in justice’s court before a jury, and verdict and judgment rendered thereon in favor of the plaintiff. The cause was removed to the eircuit by certiorari, where the judgment of the justice was affirmed. The justice in his return certifies that he is “ not able to return all the testimony in the case, as the case was tried by a jury, but that the foregoing is about all the testimony given on the said trial.” It is very evident from this return that the evidence cannot be examined for the purpose of determining whether the verdict and judgment could be thereby supported. The weight of the testimony could not in any event be here considered,- and but slight omissions in the return might very materially affect and vary the tendency. And we must accept the return upon this matter, even as against the affidavit for the allowance of the writ,, as conclusive.

The only other cpiestion necessary to be noticed relates to the verdict of the jury. The action was brought to recover the value of a bonnet ordered by the wife of the defendant, from the plaintiff. The evidence tended to show an acceptance of the bonnet by Mrs. McElvaine, and that it was permitted to remain in the possession of the plaintiff. The verdict was in favor of the plaintiff, for the value, “ and that' the plaintiff deliver to the defendant the bonnet.” This-was no more than a statement of what would legally follow from the verdict rendered and judgment thereon. The-bonnet would belong to and was the property of the defendant or his wife; the law would so award, and the jury by so declaring did not thereby destroy the effect of their finding in favor of the plaintiff for the value thereof. This part of the verdict may well be rejected as unnecessary, and that part pertaining to the matter submitted to them be permitted to remain.

The judgment must be affirmed with costs.

The other Justices concurred.  