Burleigh v. Wong Soon Leun

139 A. 184, 83 N.H. 115, 1927 N.H. LEXIS 46
CourtSupreme Court of New Hampshire
DecidedOctober 4, 1927
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 139 A. 184 (Burleigh v. Wong Soon Leun) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Hampshire primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Burleigh v. Wong Soon Leun, 139 A. 184, 83 N.H. 115, 1927 N.H. LEXIS 46 (N.H. 1927).

Opinion

Allen, J.

The referee found that the defendant was not a party to the lease, and the main question which the case presents is whether the finding precludes the plaintiff from further right to litigate the issue. While the question is raised on a denial of a motion to strike out the allegation of the writ setting forth other parties as being the defendant, and while the motion if granted would leave the plaintiff free to .bring another action against the defendant, since to strike out the defendant’s name would leave a record of no action brought against it, yet both parties admit the scope and purpose of the motion as raising the question of the effect of the finding, and the question has been fully argued. As the motion may be readily amended by substituting a motion for judgment, ánd as the parties concede that decision on the exception will determine the defendant’s right to judgment, the case has been considered as though the motion were thus amended.

The jurisdictional question arising from the fact that the order of reference was made before the return day of the writ on which the *117 action was brought is to be resolved in the defendant’s favor. The plaintiff made no objection but consented to the order, and while jurisdiction over the subject-matter of a controversy cannot be acquired by agreement of the parties (Griffin’s Petition, 27 N. H. 343; Little v. Dickinson, 29 N. H. 56; Batchelder v. Currier, 45 N. H. 460, 464; State v. Kennison, 55 N. H. 242, 245; Mansfield v. Holton, 74 N. H. 417, 421), yet when there is such jurisdiction, irregularity in the proceedings makes them voidable only, and objections to them on that account must be taken specifically and seasonably. State v. Richmond, 26 N. H. 232, 242; Warren v. Glynn, 37 N. H. 340, 343; Kimball v. Fisk, 39 N. H. 110, 123; Roberts v. Company, 78 N. H. 491, 492. Jurisdiction attaching, the courts’ powers “as a necessary incident to their general jurisdiction, to make such orders in relation to the cases pending before them, as are necessary to the progress of the cases and the dispatch of business” follow. Deming v. Foster, 42 N. H. 165, 178.

When the order was made, the action had been brought and was pending. Although not properly before the court until the return day and entry of the writ, the service of process gave the court jurisdiction. Service of process, and not its return, is the jurisdictional requisite. 21 R. C. L. 1315, and cases cited. The requirements of a return day in the writ and of its return are essentials in the validity of process to bring the parties before the court, but as service may be waived by general appearance, so also may defects in connection with the return. The statutory requirements of process (P. L., c. 330, ss. 14-20; Ib., c. 331, s. 1) are designed to provide and accomplish regularity of procedure, but are not indispensable to give jurisdiction if waived by consent or non-objection.

Various enactments giving courts authority to do certain things after process is instituted but before its return show the legislative understanding that the litigation is pending from its institution by service and that jurisdiction attaches from such time; and in particular the provision of P. L., c. 316, s. 6, that the superior court “shall take cognizance of civil actions . . . according to the course of the common law” indicates a purpose not to make the statutory regulations for the return and entry of process in any way a restriction or encroachment upon common-law jurisdiction.

The master’s report was filed and action taken on it after the return day and entry of the writ. Whether by consent action on the report would have been properly taken before the return day and entry therefore does not need to be decided. No objection to any *118 jurisdictional invalidity in connection with the proceedings being taken at the time, the confirmation of the report, so far as relates to jurisdiction, gave it the effect of an agreed statement of the facts appearing in it, since the parties had agreed that the facts should be found according to the course of procedure taken.

The disposal of the preliminary questions brings for consideration the question of the defendant’s right to judgment in view of the master’s finding that it was not a party to the lease. It is claimed that the court’s findings that the reference was- only of the trustee’s liability and that neither the court nor the plaintiff had any intention that the master should try the merits of the plaintiff’s case make the principle of res adjudicata inapplicable.

While only the matter of the trustee’s liability was directly referred, yet it was intended by the reference to have the master try the issue whether the defendant was a party to the lease. The defendant claimed by its motion that the attachment was invalid because it was not a party to the lease. It was a proposition that a good defense to the action was ground for vacating the attachment. The statutes relating to mesne attachments made the claim legally absurd, but the plaintiff did not demur to the motion, and the agreement for the reference and the course of proceedings under it evidence beyond any doubt that the parties understood and intended that the trustee’s liability was dependent upon the issue of the defendant’s participation in the lease as a party to it. While the defendant’s liability to the plaintiff was not the direct and specific matter referred, yet the trustee’s liability as dependent upon such liability óf the defendant was referred. This issue was the only question as to which the parties were in dispute, and they sought to have it determined by the reference. The court’s adoption of their agreement gave it judicial character, and the meaning and purpose of the reference is shown by the conduct of the parties in entering into it and proceeding as they did under it, since the court acted in pursuance, and not in contravention, of the agreement. The situation is not one in which the parties undertook by later agreement to enlarge the authority given by the agreement, but is one in which the court gave the authority the parties agreed and acted upon. So far as the finding that only the trustee’s liability was referred is inconsistent with the facts conclusively appearing and as herein stated, it is to such extent modified.

The master’s finding that the defendant was not a party to the lease entitled it to have the attachment dissolved in view of the plaintiff’s concession by waiver of defense to the claim that such a *119 result should follow. Whether it also entitled the defendant to judgment does not depend upon the understanding of either the court or the plaintiff. And the finding in respect to such understanding becomes immaterial. The effect to be given a judgment is wholly a matter of law in the absence of agreement altering or modifying it, and the understanding either of court or party may not control or regulate the force and results which attach to the judgment.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
139 A. 184, 83 N.H. 115, 1927 N.H. LEXIS 46, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/burleigh-v-wong-soon-leun-nh-1927.