Cutrona v. Sicard

1 Mass. App. Div. 1
CourtMassachusetts District Court, Appellate Division
DecidedJanuary 27, 1936
StatusPublished

This text of 1 Mass. App. Div. 1 (Cutrona v. Sicard) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts District Court, Appellate Division primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cutrona v. Sicard, 1 Mass. App. Div. 1 (Mass. Ct. App. 1936).

Opinion

Pettingell, J.

Some time prior to January 19, 1932, one George W. Ramsden was in an automobile collision ■with one Sebastian Cutrona, and on that date brought suit for damage sustained in that collision. In the writ beginning that action, the defendant was named as Salvatore Cutrona, Jr.; service of the writ was made by delivering a summons of it in hand to Sebastian Cutrona; the return of the constable upon the writ was to the effect that service was made by delivery in hand to Salvatore Cutrona, Jr. Sebastian Cutrona engaged counsel, who not knowing that Sebastian was not Salvatore, entered an appearance in the name of Salvatore. Sebastian attended the trial and testified as a witness. The plaintiff Ramsden secured judgment against Salvatore Cutrona, Jr. on which an execution was issued which was levied upon the property of Salvatore Cutrona, Jr., the plaintiff in this case, by the present defendant, a constable. Before the levy, the defendant was informed that Salvatore was not involved in the action in which Ramsden was the plaintiff, but that Sebastian Cutrona was the person against whom the judgment was obtained and was the actual defendant in that case. The trial judge made a finding of fact, “that the defendant in the present case had reasonable grounds to believe that an error had been made in the first case, and that said Sebastian Cutrona was the person who actually appeared and defended the first case, and was the person against whom it was intended judgment should be rendered”. There was evidence that the defendant knew that Salvatore Cutrona, Jr. had not been served with process in the first action.

The trial judge also found, “that the defendant in this action relied implicitly upon the execution issued in said first case in serving said execution”.

[4]*4There was a finding for the defendant. The report contains all the evidence material to the questions reported.

The judgment in the first action was against Sebastian Cutrona and not against Salvatore Cutrona, Jr., as to whom it was a nullity.

“The right of a person to adopt a name in which to transact business and to sue and to be sued either in that name or in his own seems to be generally recognized.” Liddell v. Middlesex Motor Co., 275 Mass. 346, at 352, 353.

And when one is sued in a name not his own, and personal service upon him is made, if he wishes to avoid liability in the name in which he is sued, his duty is to plead the misnomer in abatement. Smith v. Bowker, 1 Mass. 76, at 79; Wood v. LeBaron, 8 Cush. 471, at 473; Trull v. Howland, 10 Cush. 109, at 112-114; Liddell v. Middlesex Motor Co., 275 Mass. 346, at 352, 353. Failure so to plead is “an admission of the truth of the matters set out in the declaration of so deliberate and solemn a character that he cannot be heard in denial of it so long as the judgment rendered in that suit remains unreversed”. Gorman’s Case, 124 Mass. 190, at 192, 193. Where there has been personal service upon the defendant, and there has been a mistake in his name, the judgment obtained against him has been neld good. Root v. Fellowes, 6 Cush. 29, at 30; Dindio v. Meshaka, 275 Mass. 112, at 114; Liddell v. Middlesex Motor Co., 275 Mass. 346, at 352, at 353. Such a judgment is valid if the one personally served has failed to appear and the judgment is based on a default. Smith v. Bowker, 1 Mass. 76, at 79; Trull v. Howland, 10 Cush. 109, at 112, 114; O’Shaughnessy v. Baxter, 121 Mass. 515, at 516; Gorman’s Case, 124 Mass. 190, at 192,193; Cleaveland v. Boston Five Cents Savings Bank, 129 Mass. 27, at 30; and where there has been personal service and the default of the person [5]*5served, the plaintiff may amend his writ, correcting the name of the defendant, without notice to him. Langmaid v. Puffer, 7 Gray 378, at 380, 382; Bay State Wholesale Drug Co. v. Whitman, 280 Mass. 188, at 195.

The rule is different where there is no personal service or something1 equivalent thereto. Where a writ, incorrectly naming the defendant, was left at a place which the court found was not the last and usual abode of the defendant, it was held in an action on the judgment obtained in that action that it was essential to the plaintiff’s recovery that it should be proved, not only that the defendant was the real person sued but that he was duly served with process, though under a mistaken name. Judgment in the second action was entered for the defendant. Fitzgerald v. Salentine, 10 Met. 436, at 437, 438.

In Liddell v. Middlesex Motor Co., 275 Mass. 346, at 353, the court said, in determining the defendant’s liability,

“All the essential conditions precedent to the entry of a judgment against Bumford under the name describing the defendant in the writ, as stated in Fitzgerald v. Salentine, 10 Met. 436, 438, were present in this case. Actual service of process was made upon him; he was the party intended to be sued; he has been fully heard and his liability for the plaintiff’s injury has been established. If he had cared to take any advantage of a misnomer or misdescription in the writ he should have done so by plea in abatement, and not having so pleaded he has waived any objection which might have been raised by such plea and" judgment may now be entered against him in the name by which he was described in.the writ”.

In a recent case in which the facts were similar to those in Fitzgerald v. Salentine, the court found that the judgment rendered against the party sued in the first action was a nullity.

[6]*6“It is clear upon the reported facts that the present defendant (Joseph S. Wood) and no other person was the person intended to be sued in the previous action. It is also clear that the present defendant was not served in hand with the writ or summons in the previous action; that the writ served in the previous actian named Joseph S. Woods as defendant; and that service was- made on such defendant by leaving a sum-mans of the writ at a place which was not the last and usual abode of Joseph S. Wood, the present defendant. In these circumstances it is plain a judgment by default against the present defendant was a nullity as to him . . . The result would be different had the writ actually been served upon the present defendant in the previous action.”
F. H. Hill Co. Inc. v. Doe, 286 Mass. 187, at 190.

Thus it is to ¡be seen that where one is personally served with process, although incorrectly described as to name, and does not plead the misnomer in abatement, a judgment obtained against him is good, and may be levied on his property in the name by which he was sued. On the other hand, if there is not personal service, or an equivalent, any judgment recovered against the defendant named is a nullity. Compare the provisions of Gr. L. (Ter. Ed.) C. 223, Section 19.

In the case under consideration, a good judgment was obtained against Sebastian Cutrona, although he was sued in the name of Salvatore Cutrona Jr. He was served with process, he appeared and defended, and he was the party intended to be sued. As to Sebastian’s liability, for a case very close on the facts, see Dindio v. Meshaka, 275 Mass. 112, at 114.

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Bluebook (online)
1 Mass. App. Div. 1, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cutrona-v-sicard-massdistctapp-1936.