Elliott v. Clement

151 P.2d 739, 149 P.2d 985, 175 Or. 44, 1944 Ore. LEXIS 79
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 19, 1944
StatusPublished
Cited by29 cases

This text of 151 P.2d 739 (Elliott v. Clement) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Elliott v. Clement, 151 P.2d 739, 149 P.2d 985, 175 Or. 44, 1944 Ore. LEXIS 79 (Or. 1944).

Opinions

LUSK, J.

Several alleged defects in the foreclosure proceedings entitled Grant County v. Edna Arnold et al. are urged by the defendants, but there is one which, in our judgment, is decisive of the case and, therefore, the only one that need be discussed.

By the published summons the defendants were required “to appear within sixty days from and after the date of service upon you, exclusive of the first day of said service, and defend this suit.” The proceedings were governed by §§ 69-807 and 69-816, Oregon Code 1930. The latter section provides that “in all foreclosures by a county summons may be served or notice given exclusively by publication in one general notice”, while § 69-807 prescribes that when service is made by publication the summons shall contain a direction “to appear within sixty days after the date of the first publication of the summons, exclusive of the date of said first publication, and defend the action or pay the amount due”.

The published summons did not comply with the requirement of the statute.

The Supreme Court of Washington, after whose laws our statute is patterned (Hoskins v. Dwight, 69 Or. 558, 565, 139 P. 922; Getchell v. Walker, 129 Or. 602, 278 P. 93; see specially concurring opinion of Mr. Justice Rossman in National Surety Corporation v. Smith, 168 Or. 265, 325, 114 P. (2d) 118, 123 P. (2d) 203), in several decisions rendered before this state’s adoption of the statute, held “that a tax foreclosure summons which does not conform to existing law in the important feature of fixing the time within which a defendant shall appear is so fatally defective that it *49 confers no jurisdiction to enter a judgment, and that a judgment entered thereon is void.” Woodham v. Anderson, 32 Wash. 500, 73 P. 536 (1903). In that case the summons required the defendants to appear “within sixty days from the date of the first publication of the summons.” The applicable statutes provided that the summons in a tax case should require the defendants to appear within sixty days after the service of the summons, exclusive of the day of service, and that service of publication should not be deemed complete until the expiration of the time required for publication. It was held that the court lacked jurisdiction and the judgment, therefore, was void. Thompson v. Robbins, 32 Wash. 149, 72 P. 1043 (1903); Smith v. White, 32 Wash. 414, 73 P. 480 (1903); and Young v. Droz, 38 Wash. 648, 80 P. 810 (1905), each dealt with a summons containing the direction “to appear within sixty days after the service of this summons upon you, exclusive of the day of service”. The governing statute as to these three cases provided that the summons should direct the defendant “to appear within sixty days after the date of the first publication of the summons exclusive of the day of said first publication.” In all three cases the summonses were held fatally defective and the judgments of foreclosure void. In Smith v. White, supra, the court quoted with approval the following language from Thompson v. Robbins, supra:

“This summons was not in accordance with the statute and its publication did not confer upon the court jurisdiction to render the judgment which was entered in the foreclosure proceeding. And the judgment was therefore not merely irregular but void. ’ ’

Like decisions are Thompson v. Schoner, 58 Wash. 642, 109 P. 116 (1910); Owen v. Owen, 41 Wash. 642, *50 84 P. 606 (1906); Dolan v. Jones, 37 Wash. 176, 79 P. 640 (1905).

In principle these cases are not to be distinguished from the instant case. The summons here not only does not comply with the statute — so much is admitted — but it is also “indefinite and uncertain as to the time within which he (the defendant) was required to enter his appearance in the proceeding.” Thompson v. Bobbins, supra. We cannot accept the view that a defendant-could be expected to know that the words “exclusive of the first day of service” were intended, when taken with the other language of the summons, as a direction to appear within sixty days after its first publication, for the summons nowhere refers to the time of any publication as the date from which the sixty days is to commence to run. The direction to appear “sixty days from and after the date of service upon you” is, in our opinion, meaningless, and there is, therefore, no room for the contention that the summons gives the defendants more time for appearance than does the statute and that the defect is a mere irregularity. If more time, how much more? And when would the court be authorized to enter a default for a defendant’s failure to appear?

We will not stop to inquire whether the rule should be applied here that we are governed by the Washington court’s construction of their statute. It is intimated by the plaintiff that this rule is inapplicable because in this state tax foreclosures by counties were not declared to be proceedings in rem until 1919 (General Laws of Oregon 1919, Ch. 408, § 4, p. 756; § 69-816, Oregon Code 1930). That fact is also made the basis of an argument, presently to be noticed, that the defect in the summons is not jurisdictional. But whether the Washington decisions are binding on us or not, they are *51 certainly highly persuasive; no cases to the contrary have been cited; and, as we shall presently endeavor to show, they are sound in principle.

Certainly the 1919 amendment of our statute, which provided that ‘ ‘ said proceedings shall be and be deemed and considered a proceeding in rem against the property itself”, affords no basis for distinguishing the Washington cases, because in Washington, although there is no such language in the statute of that state, the proceedings have more than once been declared to be in rem. Reese v. Thurston County, 154 Wash. 617, 623, 283 P. 170 (1929); Washington Timber, etc., Co. v. Smith, 34 Wash. 625, 76 P. 267 (1904). In the latter case the court said:

“The difficulties attending the collection of public revenue are many at best, and the relation of the citizen to the subject is somewhat different from his relation to the ordinary contractual obligations. He must take notice that by law his property is assessed each year, that the tax is due and delinquent at a fixed time, is a lien upon his land, and, if not paid, that the lien shall be enforced by foreclosure proceedings, and in the manner provided by statute. The action is not in personam but in rem *::< # ? ?

It is not necessary, indeed, that the legislature should in express terms define the nature of the proceedings, for, as Judge Cooley says:

“Proceedings of this nature are not usually proceedings against parties, nor, in the case of lands or interests in lands belonging to persons unknown, can they be.

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Bluebook (online)
151 P.2d 739, 149 P.2d 985, 175 Or. 44, 1944 Ore. LEXIS 79, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/elliott-v-clement-or-1944.