Dean v. Cannon

16 S.E. 444, 37 W. Va. 123, 1892 W. Va. LEXIS 12
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 26, 1892
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 16 S.E. 444 (Dean v. Cannon) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dean v. Cannon, 16 S.E. 444, 37 W. Va. 123, 1892 W. Va. LEXIS 12 (W. Va. 1892).

Opinion

IIolt, Judge:

In January, 1891, in the Circuit Court of Ritchie county, Callie Dean, Adda Cannon, and others brought this suit in equity against John Cannon and others for an account of rents and profits of a certain tract of land, for a sale thereof, and distribution of proceeds, in lieu of partition in kind.

The five infant defendants answered by their guardian ad litem; and on the 16th day of February, 1891, all the defendants appeared by their attorney, and suggested that the plaintiffs were non-residents of the State of West Virginia, and demanded security for costs. On the question of non-residence the affidavit of the plaintiff Adda Cannon was taken and read, tending to show that she was a resident. The counter affidavits of six persons were taken and read, tending to show that plaintiff Adda Cannon was not a resident of this State, hut was a resident of Washington county, State of Pennsylvania, whereupon the court entered the following final decree:

“Callie Dean and otiiees

o.

“Wm. F. Cannon and otiieRS.

1 > J

In Chancery.

“This cause came on this day to he heard upon the suggestion on the record of this Court, at a former term hereof, by the defendants, of the non-residence of all the plaintiffs, and upon the proof filed on behalf of the [plaintiff Adda Cannon, as to her residence in the State as well as the affidavits filed as proof by the defendants, as to her non-residence. Upon consideration whereof the court, is of opinion that the preponderance of proof is that the said Adda Cannon is a non-resident of the State, and that she is not a resident of the said State. Audit not being proved in any way that any of the plaintiffs in this cause are residents of the State of West Virginia, and the plaintiffs not having given the security for costs, as required by law, either before this Court or the clerk thereof, within sixty days from the time of the said suggestion upon the records of this Court, nor upon any day of this term, and the last day of this term of this Court having arrived, it is adjudged, ordered, and decreed that this suit be dismissed. It is fur-[125]*125thcr adjudged, ordered, and decreed that the. defendants recover of the plaintiffs their costs about their suit in this behalf expended.”

From the above final decree of the Circuit Court of Kitohie county, the plaintiffs appealed to this Court.

By the Code of Virginia of 1819 security for costs was 'required to be given within sixty days after notice shall at any time during such non-residence have been given to the demandant of plaintiff or his attorney by some person interested, that such security is required etc. 1 Code 1819, p. 495. By the Code of Virginia of 1849 (Ed. 1860) and the Code of West Virginia (1891) c. 1-38, s. 2, the notice is required to be given by a suggestion on the record in court, or, if the case be at rules, on the rule docket, “that the plaintiff is not a resident of this State, and that security is required of him.”

The present law requires no other notice, nor the entry or service of any rule; for section 2, c. 138, provides further : “After sixty days from such suggestion the suit shall, by order of the court, be dismissed, unless before the dis-mission the plaintiff be proved to bo a resident of the State, or security be given,” etc. But the practice has always been to permit the security to be given before the order of dismissal is entered, although the sixty days have elapsed. Goodtitle v. See, 1 Va. Cas. 123 (1799); Vance v. Bird, 4 Munf. 365 (1815); Enos v. Stansbury, 18 W. Va. 477. Therefore the proceeding in this case was sufficient and regular, there being no need of the entry or service of any other order or rule.

But plaintiffs say defendants have waived their right to demand security for costs, and cite Enos v. Stansbury, 18 W. Va. 482; Rurler Sullivan, 25 W. Va. 429. The law was enacted for the officers of the court as well as for the defendants, and each is given expressly the right to make the suggestion of non-residence and the requisition of the security ; but it was for their benefit, and they can forego the suggestion, as the officers of the court ¿have done in this case, or they can waive it after made, as plaintiffs claim defendants have done. But as I look at it, and in the light of our Circuit Court practice, this contention of plaintiffs is not tenable.

[126]*126Let us see what the defendants Rave done, and when they did it, that amounts to a waiver of the rule for security for costs: The first order shows that on February 14, 1891, the five infant defendants, Lewis Allen Cannon, Flora Cannon, Jessie Cannon, William Cannon, and Lilia Cannon, by their guardian cul litem, Will A. Striekler, filed their answer. During the same term, viz., on February 16, 1891, “the defendants, by their attorney, suggestedthatthe plaintiffs were non-residents of West Virginia, and demanded security for costs.” Oh the -4th of April, 1891, the next term, William F. Cannon, one of the adult defendants, appeared and demurred to plaintiffs’ bill, which demurrer the court on that day overruled. At the next term, on 25th June, 1891, the cause was heard on the rule for costs and dismissed.

The sixty days from February 16,«1891, during which the rule for costs was to run, had not expired on the 4th of February, 1891, when defendant William F. Gannon demurred. The policy of the law is to expedite the hearing of causes, and the preparation’ of them for such hearing. Why not have the demurrer disposed of, and the pleadings made up, against the 16th April, 1891, or 25th June, 1891, when plaintiffs would discharge the rule by proving themselves to be citizens of the State or comply with it by giving security for costs ? Why, on April 4, 1891, were defendants bound to conduct themselves on the presumption that plaintiffs would thereafter fall short in both particulars? What would have been the effect if William F. Cannon had demurred to the bill after the lapse of the sixty days, need not be considered, but it would hardly be presumed to be a waiver of the rule on the part of his infant code-fendants.

Plaintiffs say that on the merits the decree is wrong, because plaintiff Adda Camion is shown to be a resident of this State, within the meaning of the word “resident,” and not a resident as used in the statute, and that the security for costs was required oil a false suggestion.

The'reason of the law is that if the person and the property which follows the person is not within the power and amenable to the process of the court, then security must be [127]*127given, if required of him. To have some one in reach liable and bound for costs, is the manifest pm’pose of the statute, and it would seem to be controlled by the same reason and purpose as the same term in the cases of foreign attachment.

In Long v. Ryan, 30 Graft. 718, the subject is discussed by J udge Staples with clearness and ability. “Our statu-utes, and American statutes generally, do not use the term ‘domicile/ but the terms resident and non-resident, .to express the connection between person and place; its exact signification being left to construction, to be determined from the context and the apparent object sought to be attained by the enactment.”

Jacobs on Domicile (chapter 3, § 75) citing here and on other points Long v.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
16 S.E. 444, 37 W. Va. 123, 1892 W. Va. LEXIS 12, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dean-v-cannon-wva-1892.