Eagle Gold Mining Co. v. Bryarly

28 Colo. 262
CourtSupreme Court of Colorado
DecidedJanuary 15, 1901
DocketNos. 4019 and 4020
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 28 Colo. 262 (Eagle Gold Mining Co. v. Bryarly) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Colorado primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Eagle Gold Mining Co. v. Bryarly, 28 Colo. 262 (Colo. 1901).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Steele

delivered the opinion of the court.

There are eighteen assignments of error attacking every step in the proceedings from the issuance of the summons to the rendition of the judgment, except that the attachment proceedings are conceded to have been regular but for the previous consolidation of the cases in which the,attachments were issued with cases numbered 725 and 726. We are of opinion that the plaintiff in an action to enforce a mechanic’s lien may abandon his claim to a lien at any time before judgment, and proceed by attachment as in any action on a contract; and where several such parties have in the same court caused attachments to be levied upon the same property, in suits against the same defendant, it is the duty of the court, upon application for that purpose, to cause the cases to be consolidated under the provisions of the attachment act.

The other assignments of error will be substantially determined, we think, by a decision of the following:

1. That the amount demanded in original case No. 729 is in excess of the jurisdiction of the court.

2. That no summons was issued in consolidated case No. 725.

3. That the complaints in Nos. 725 and 726 do not show any right in the plaintiffs to a lien upon the assigned claims,

4. That the court erred in overruling the motion to quash the summons in each of the cases.

5. That the judgments rendered are excessive and double; and, having been rendered on the same day, are presumed to have been rendered at the same time, and must stand or fall together.

The objection that the amount demanded in No. 729 is in excess of the jurisdiction of the court, is based upon the proposition that the $250.00 asked as an attorney’s fee in that case is part of the “debt, damage, or claim” of the plaintiff, within the provision of the constitution limiting the jurisdiction of county courts. The statute under which the case [268]*268was brought provides that a reasonable attorney’s fee, to be fixed by the court at the time of rendering judgment, shall be taxed as part of the costs; and, if it were recoverable at all, it could be recovered by force of the statute without any allegation. The allegation that $250.00 was a reasonable attorney’s fee to be recovered by the plaintiff would be rejected as surplusage but for the provision of the statute, and by the statute it is made costs, and cannot be considered in determining the jurisdiction of the court.

The statute applicable to mechanic’s lien cases does not require the issuance of an alias summons under the facts shown in consolidated case No. 725.

The objections to the sufficiency of the complaints in original cases 725 and 726 are decided adversely to the contentions of the plaintiff in error in the case of The Rialto Mining Co. v. Lowell, 23 Colo. 253, except as to the objection that the complaints should have alleged in terms an assignment “of the right to file a lien for the demands in the several complaints alleged to have been assigned to the plaintiffs.” The complaints allege the assignment to the plaintiffs of the “claim and demand” of the person entitled to perfect a lien. We think the assignment of the claim carries with it the right to the lien.

The most difficult question in the case is that raised upon the motions to quash the summonses. The returns of the sheriff upon these summonses were made during the period from February 8, to February 23; and, owing to a successful attempt on the part of the plaintiff to quash the first publication, publication was not made until about June 14, a period of more than four months. A new affidavit was, however, made in each case upon the day that the order was obtained, and the publication followed immediately. Section 41 of the code, as amended April 5, 1893, laws of 1893, p. 77, provides that: “Service by publication shall be allowed only after summons issued and return thereon made [269]*269that the defendant after diligent search cannot be found. After such return not less than ten days after issue of summons publication shall be made by order of the clerk of the proper court, * * * after return is made as aforesaid the case being such as hereinbefore mentioned,the plaintiff or one of the plaintiffs may file in the office of the proper clerk, an affidavit stating that the defendant resides out of the state, * * * whereupon the order of publication shall be made by the clerk.” This statute is peculiar. The common provision in the statutes of other states is that the order for publication may be granted upon the filing of an affidavit containing the matters required here, but without making the return of the sheriff either a condition precedent to, or one of the steps in, the application for the order. Under our statute the return of the sheriff must be regarded as an essential step in the procuring of the order for publication; and as having been made essential because of its probative force in establishing that, at the time of the publication, the summons could not be served upon the defendant in the county in which the action was pending. Starting at this point, it is contended by the plaintiff in error, that to confer jurisdiction upon the court by a publication of the summons under this statute, there must be no interruption in the proceedings from the time of the return of the sheriff to the obtaining of the order for the publication of the summons. It is apparent from an examination of this statute that the return of the sheriff was not intended by the legislature to be made the basis of the order for publication, because the service is only to be attempted in the county where the suit is brought, and the information that the defendant is a non-resident is contained only in the affidavit made by the plaintiff. And it could not have been expected that the affidavit should, in all cases, be filed immediately upon the return of the sheriff; because, in the affidavit the plaintiff is required to allege, for instance, that the defendant has departed from this state [270]*270without the intention of returning. Until return was made,, he may have supposed that the defendant would be served by the sheriff; and before he can make this affidavit, he must have made some investigation, not only in that county but elsewhere in the state, as to the whereabouts of the defendant. Some delay being evidently not fatal to the court’s jurisdiction, and the code not having fixed the time within which the publication shall be made after the return of the sheriff, and the several steps having been taken in the order required by the code, the question presented to the court below on the motion to quash was, whether or not, under the circumstances of this case, the delay was such that the court ought to refuse to entertain jurisdiction of the case further than to quash the service. The court undoubtedly had jurisdiction to pass upon that question; and, having jurisdiction to pass upon it, its judgment is not void but, at most, erroneous; and it ought not to be reversed unless, in the matter complained of, it operated injuriously to some substantial right of the defendant. If it was manifestly and clearly of no use to require the plaintiff to again place the summons in the hands of the sheriff for ten days and have a new return made, that the defendant, after diligent search was not to be found in his county, there was no necessity for doing so. It appears from the complaints and from the affidavits that the defendant is a foreign corporation.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
28 Colo. 262, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/eagle-gold-mining-co-v-bryarly-colo-1901.