Boise Flying Service, Inc. v. General Motors Acceptance Corp.

36 P.2d 813, 55 Idaho 5, 1934 Ida. LEXIS 75
CourtIdaho Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 9, 1934
DocketNo. 5954.
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 36 P.2d 813 (Boise Flying Service, Inc. v. General Motors Acceptance Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Idaho Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Boise Flying Service, Inc. v. General Motors Acceptance Corp., 36 P.2d 813, 55 Idaho 5, 1934 Ida. LEXIS 75 (Idaho 1934).

Opinions

*7 HOLDEN, J.

The Moscow Air Transportation Company Avas the owner of an airplane. On or about August 1, 1931, it leased the airplane to one Virgil Adair. About August 10, 1931, the airplane was inspected by an inspector of airplanes of the United States and declared to be unfit for carrying passengers. The inspector ordered that the airplane could only be flown to either Spokane, Washington, Butte, Montana, or Boise, Idaho, for repairs. On or about August 20, 1931, the airplane was flown to Boise and placed Aidth appellant for repairs, where, at the request of the owner and lessee, the airplane was repaired.

It appears that June 4, 1930, at Chicago, 111., one H. S. Ruddach executed a chattel mortgage to Fokker Aircraft Corporation of America, covering the airplane, the mortgage having been given to secure the payment of the balance of the purchase price of the airplane, and was later assigned to the respondent. February 4, 1931, Ruddach gave a new note for the balance then due, which provided for payment in certain instalments. The mortgage provided that in the event of default in the payment of any of the instalments respondent could declare all unpaid instalments immediately due and payable, and, upon failure to pay the instalments, respondent declared the same to be immediately due and payable, and on September 3, 1931, commenced foreclosure of the mortgage by affidavit, notice and sale; the airplane was thereupon, and at the direction of respondent, seized by the sheriff of Ada county and taken from the possession of appellant and sold. It does not appear from the record that the said chattel mortgage, executed in Chicago, was ever filed for record in Ada county, or in any other county of the state of Idaho, nor does it appear that appellant had actual notice of the existence of said mortgage at the time the material was supplied and labor performed in the repair of the airplane.

*8 February 9, 1932, appellant commenced a suit in the district court for Ada county to foreclose its statutory lien upon and to impress said airplane with such lien, for material so used and labor performed in the repair of the airplane.’ Thereafter, and on the same day, summons issued and on the next day was placed in the hands of the sheriff of Ada county for service. February 11, 1932, the sheriff made and filed the following return-.

“STATE OF IDAHO. .

“I, John McGrath, Sheriff of Ada County, Idaho do hereby certify and return that I received the annexed Summons on the 10th day of February 1932 and I further certify that I personally served the same on the 10th day of February 1932 on the defendant named in said Summons by delivering to and leaving with Stephen Utter, County Auditor of the said Ada County personally, at Boise, County of Ada State of Idaho, a copy of said Summons together with a copy of the complaint in said action attached to said copy of Summons, the said defendant being a foreign corporation and does not have any designated person or agent actually residing in Ada County, Idaho, the county in which the defendant is doing business in this state upon whom process can be served.

“Sheriff’s fee, 1.90.

“JOHN McGRATH,

‘ ‘ Sheriff.

“By GEO. R. WEBSTER,

“Deputy.”

March 19, 1932, the clerk entered the default of the respondent. March 26, 1932, appellant submitted proof in support of its complaint, and on the same day judgment was rendered and entered in favor of appellant.

May 16, 1932, respondent, a foreign corporation, made a special appearance and moved to vacate and set such judgment aside (the motion being supported by affidavits) upon the following grounds: That the judgment was void in that no personal service was made upon the respondent, or upon any of its officers; that the judgment was void in *9 that respondent at no time mentioned in the, complain!, or at any other time, “was doing business in this state, and, accordingly, had no designated person upon whom process could be served as provided for service of process on foreign corporations doing business in the state of Idaho”; that service of summons “was made only upon the auditor of Ada County, Idaho, who did not forward the same to any office or officer” of the respondent.

Appellant filed affidavits in opposition to the said motion of the respondent to the effect that respondent was doing business in the state of Idaho.

June 9, 1932, an order was made and filed vacating and setting the judgment aside. This appeal is from that order.

The hearing of respondent’s motion was upon affidavits and documentary evidence alone; therefore, “this court will make an original examination of the evidence as contained in the record and will exercise its judgment and discretion the same as if the case were being presented to us in the first instance.” (Parsons v. Wrble, 19 Ida. 619, 115 Pac. 8, 13.) In other words, this court “will examine the record as though the matter had never been heard or examined by the trial court, and will exercise its discretion in the matter, the same as a trial court is authorized to do in such matters.” (Council Improvement Co. v. Draper, 16 Ida. 541, 542, 102 Pac. 7.)

The controlling questions on this appeal are: 1. Was respondent “doing business” in this state as contemplated by subdivision No. 3 of section 5-507, I. C. A.? 2. Did substituted service give the district court jurisdiction to try the case and enter judgment against the respondent?

Subdivision No. 3 of section 5-507, I. C. A., provides as follows:

“Whenever any foreign corporation, nonresident joint stock company or association shall not have any designated person actually residing in the county in which said corporation or joint stock company shall be doing business, in this state upon whom process can be served as provided *10 in section 29-502 of this code, or when the agent of such company as provided in said section shall have removed from, or ceased to be a resident, or can not after due diligence be found within the county where the action arose, or conceals himself in order to avoid the service of process, then service of such summons shall be made upon the county auditor of said county with like effect as though said service were made upon an agent or person appointed and designated as provided in said section 29-502, and it shall be the duty of such auditor to forward a copy of such summons so served on him, by registered mail, to the principal business office of such corporation, in this state, if the address of such office be known to him, but no failure on the part of such auditor to mail such copy of summons shall affect the validity of the service thereof.”

It appears from an affidavit filed in behalf of appellant that respondent has been a partj'- in various eases in the United States district court for the district of Idaho and in our state courts. In the case of U. S. v. Margaret Wilson and G. M. A. C. (Respondent), it is alleged by respondent that it “is a corporation .... having complied with provisions of the State of Idaho”; in G. M. A. G. (Respondent) v. Commercial Credit Co.,

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Shelton v. Diamond International Corp.
703 P.2d 699 (Idaho Supreme Court, 1985)
Geer v. Stathopulos
309 P.2d 606 (Supreme Court of Colorado, 1957)
Johnson v. Noland
308 P.2d 588 (Idaho Supreme Court, 1957)
Perry v. Perkins
245 P.2d 405 (Idaho Supreme Court, 1952)
Curtis v. Siebrand Bros. Circus & Carnival Co.
194 P.2d 281 (Idaho Supreme Court, 1948)
State v. Winstead
162 P.2d 894 (Idaho Supreme Court, 1945)
People v. South P. R. Sugar Co.
56 P.R. 633 (Supreme Court of Puerto Rico, 1940)
Pueblo v. South P. R. Sugar Co.
56 P.R. Dec. 661 (Supreme Court of Puerto Rico, 1940)
Voellmeck v. Northwestern Mutual Life Insurance
92 P.2d 1076 (Idaho Supreme Court, 1939)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
36 P.2d 813, 55 Idaho 5, 1934 Ida. LEXIS 75, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/boise-flying-service-inc-v-general-motors-acceptance-corp-idaho-1934.