Agricultural Credit Corp. v. Peterson

241 N.W. 605, 59 S.D. 579, 1932 S.D. LEXIS 185
CourtSouth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 22, 1932
DocketFile No. 7187.
StatusPublished

This text of 241 N.W. 605 (Agricultural Credit Corp. v. Peterson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering South Dakota Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Agricultural Credit Corp. v. Peterson, 241 N.W. 605, 59 S.D. 579, 1932 S.D. LEXIS 185 (S.D. 1932).

Opinion

CAMPBELL, P. J.

In March, 1928, plaintiff instituted the above-entitled action for the foreclosure of a second mortgage on real estate in Brown county, fee title to the premises being in Mary Peterson, one of the defendants. Plaintiff sought foreclosure and deficiency judgment on the debt, and, as ancillary relief, the appointment of a receiver.

Pursuant to plaintiff’s application, a receiver was appointed in April, 1928, and in May, 1928, defendants made an unsuccessful attempt to have the trial court vacate the order appointing the receiver. In June, 1928, judgment was entered in favor of plaintiff and against defendants in the foreclosure action, and the receivership was continued pending the further order of the court. Iri *581 August, 1928, the realty was sold upon foreclosure and the sale confirmed. In October, 1929, the receiver filed his final report and asked approval and confirmation thereof and his discharge. This report showed in detail all the receiver’s receipts and all his disbursements and the purposes for 'which made, and showed that he had collected rentals and had disbursed the same, inter alia, in payment of taxes and in payment of interest and installments of principal falling due upon prior incumbrances, etc.

Upon the filing of the receiver’s final report, the trial court fixed a timé and place for hearing thereon and issued its order directing the defendants to appear and show cause at such time and place, if any they had, why the report of the receiver should not be approved and allowed and the receiver discharged. The show cause order provided that such order, together with a copy of the receiver’s final report, be personally served on the defendants, and this was done.

At the time fixed in the show cause order, October 18, 1929, no appearance was made and no objections were filed (Rule 7, relating to trust estates) by the defendants, or either of them, and on that day the learned trial judge duly made, entered and filed his order, in all things allowing and approving the report of the receiver as made, and 'discharging the receiver. No written notice of the filing of this order (section 3147, R. C. 1919) was served upon the defendants.

Approximately six months later (April 11, 1930) this court handed down its decision in Knudson v. Powers, 56 S. D. 613, 230 N. W. 282. By that decision it was established for the first time as the law of this state that certain disbursements (which, pursuant to the general practice and understanding of attorneys in no inconsiderable portion of this state, had previously been regarded without question as proper and legitimate expenditures on the part of a receiver in a foreclosure action) were not in fact proper expenditures to be made by a receiver on foreclosure, and that the receiver should not be allowed credit upon his accounting therefor.

After receiving and disregarding the court’s order in the instant case to appear and show cause on October 18, 1929, why the receiver’s report as made, filed, and served should not be al *582 lowed and confirmed, defendants took no steps whatever for a little over a year. On October 25, 1930, defendant Mary Peterson applied to the trial court upon affidavit, reciting that, although the copy of the receiver’s final report and the order to show cause why the- same should not be approved had been served upon her, she had failed by ina'divertence and excusable neglect to appear and object to said report, and prayed that she be relieved from her default, that the order of October 18, 1929, approving the receiver’s report -be vacated, and that she have leave to make and file objections to the allowance and approval of said report. • Upon this application of Mary Peterson the court issued its order directing plaintiff to show cause at a time and place fixed why Mary P'eterson should not be excused from her default, the order approving the final report of the receiver vacated, and said Mary Peterson permitted to make objections to the allowance thereof. Plaintiff appeared at the time and place fixed, but defendant Mary Peterson apparently abandoned her effort to be relieved from her default and have the proceedings opened up, for she made no- appearance whatever. The learned trial court thereupon made and entered its order reciting the application of Mary Peterson to be relieved from her default, her failure to appear in support thereof, and finding, upon all the files and records and the evidence submitted by plaintiff, that Mary Peterson had full knowledge and legal notice o.[ the contents of the receiver’s final report, the time when the same would be brought on for allowance and approval, and had entirely failed to establish that her default in said matter was the result of any mistake, inadvertence, surprise, or excusable neglect, and therefore that the application of Mary Peterson to open up the matter was in all things denied, and refusing to modify or vacate the order of October 18, 1929. This order was dated, entered, and filed December 1, 1930, and notice of the entry thereof was served upon counsel for defendant Mary Peterson on December 1, 1930.

Under those circumstances, paying no further attention to the order of December 1, 1930, denying her application to be relieved of her default, and making no attempt to appeal therefrom, defendant Mary Peterson undertook, by service of notice of appeal on December 18, 1930, to appeal t'o this court from the order of October 18, 1929, and upon this appeal she seeks to challenge said order upon the merits and to maintain that a receiver ought never *583 to have been appointed, and that certain items of disbursement credited to him upon his final account were improper within the rule established by this court in Knudson v. Powers, supra.

A preliminary question is whether the order of October 18, 1929, was made (in contemplation of law) upon notice to the appellant. That the report of the receiver in detail and the order to show cause on October 18, 1929, why the same should not be allowed and approved were personally served upon the appellant by the sheriff of Minnehaha county, pursuant to the order of the court and prior to the hearing date, is not disputed. Appellant maintains, however, -that, pursuant to section 2589, R. C. 1919, service should have been made upon her attorney, and that service upon her personally was not effective for any purpose. The statute in question reads as follows: “Where a party shall have an attorney in the action, the service of papers shall be made upon the attorney, instead of the party.”

Respondent contends that an order to show cause is in the nature of process, and therefore, by the specific provision of section 2590, R. C. 1919, § 2589, above quoted, is not applicable. Respondent further contends that section 2589, R. C. 1919, by its terms, applies to actions; that a receivership in connection with an action to foreclose a mortgage is not in itself an action, but is a provisional remedy (section 2382, R. C. 1919), and a special remedial proceeding (sections 2091, 2092, R. C. 1919), and that procedure therein, including the manner of giving notice of hearing, etc., is governed specifically by rules 7 and 12 relating to trust estates (46 S. D. preliminary page IX) promulgated by this court, pursuandt to the authority of chapter 156, Raws 1923.

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Related

Irwin v. Lattin
135 N.W. 759 (South Dakota Supreme Court, 1912)
Carlberg v. Fields
146 N.W. 560 (South Dakota Supreme Court, 1914)
Keyes v. Baskerville
175 N.W. 874 (South Dakota Supreme Court, 1919)
Knudson v. Powers
230 N.W. 282 (South Dakota Supreme Court, 1930)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
241 N.W. 605, 59 S.D. 579, 1932 S.D. LEXIS 185, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/agricultural-credit-corp-v-peterson-sd-1932.