First State Bank of Strasburg v. Schmaltz

237 N.W. 644, 61 N.D. 150, 1931 N.D. LEXIS 257
CourtNorth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 6, 1931
DocketFile No. 5947.
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 237 N.W. 644 (First State Bank of Strasburg v. Schmaltz) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering North Dakota Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
First State Bank of Strasburg v. Schmaltz, 237 N.W. 644, 61 N.D. 150, 1931 N.D. LEXIS 257 (N.D. 1931).

Opinion

ChRistxaNSON, Ch. J.

This is an appeal from an order denying a motion on the part of the defendant Katherina Schmaltz to vacate and set aside a judgment which was entered against her by default in the above entitled action on the 27th day of April, 1925. The motion was based upon the ground that no service of the summons in the action was made upon her; that the sheriff’s return showing such service was and is untrue, and that the district conrt never acquired jurisdiction over the person of the defendant Katherina Schmaltz.

The motion to vacate the judgment was supported by the affidavits of the defendants Katherina Schmaltz and Joseph Schmaltz and the affidavit of one Joe Volk, Jr., who was sheriff of Emmons county in 1925 and as such sheriff made the return of service of process iipon which the judgment is based.

When the matter came on for hearing, the district court, of its own *153 motion, directed that the parties who had made the several affidavits appear in person and testify relative to the matters mentioned in their affidavits “so that the court might have the benefit of seeing the 'witnesses and hearing their testimony and that they might be subjected to cross-examination on behalf of the plaintiff.” The defendants Kath-erina Schmaltz and Joseph Schmaltz and the said Joe Yolk, Jr., did so appear, and were examined and cross-examined by counsel for the respective parties. The attorney of record for the plaintiff also testified.

As regards whether the summons and complaint had been served upon the defendant Katherina Schmaltz and whether the return of service was true or false, the several persons called testified substantially as follows: The defendant Katherina Schmaltz testified that the summons and complaint were at no time served upon her. Iier husband, the defendant Joseph Schmaltz, testified that on February 18, 1925, Joe Volk, Jr., the then sheriff of Emmons county, met him in front of a pool hall in the village of Strasburg, in said county; that the sheriff asked him where Mrs. Schmaltz was and stated that he had been at the home of the defendants but had found no one there; that it was too cold to drive out there; that the sheriff thereupon gave him two sets of papers in the above entitled action stating that one was for him (Joseph Schmaltz) and the other for his wife, the defendant Katherina Schmaltz; that the defendant Joseph Schmaltz took the papers home with him and “threw them in a drawer; ” that he did not give the papers to his wife or say anything to her about the matter. Joe Yolk, Jr., testified that on receipt of the papers he drove to the home of the Schmaltz’s and, finding no one there, drove to Strasburg and that he there served both copies on Joseph Schmaltz and told him to be sure to give one copy to his wife and that one was for him; that he further told Schmaltz that the papers were in a suit on a note and for the foreclosure of a mortgage. Yolk further testified that the return of service was prepared by, or in the office of, the attorney for the plaintiff and that at the time he made the return he informed plaintiff’s attorney of the manner in which the service had been made. The attorney for the plaintiff denied that the return of service was prepared in his office or by him or under his direction or that the sheriff in any manner informed him that he had served the papers in anv manner other than *154 that indicated in tbe return itself. Certain other matters were developed in the oral testimony which will be referred to later.

Aside from the testimony adduced upon the hearing relating to whether the summons and complaint in the action were served upon the defendant Katherina Schmaltz, the following facts are established beyond dispute: — In 1925 the plaintiff bank was the owner and holder of two promissory notes executed and delivered to it by the two defendants, Joseph Schmaltz and Katherina Schmaltz, his wife. These notes were secured by a real estate mortgage upon a one hundred sixty acre tract in Emmons county. This mortgage was subject to a prior mortgage for $1,500.00 given by the defendants to the Union Investment Company. Default having occurred therein, the first mortgage was foreclosed by advertisement and the premises covered thereby were sold at foreclosure sale in August, 1924. Default also occurred in *the mortgage held by the plaintiff bank and on or about January 3, 1925 it caused notice of intention to foreclose such mortgage to be given to the mortgagor. The default still continuing the plaintiff on February 5, 1925 commenced this action in the district court of Emmons county to foreclose the mortgage.

In the complaint the plaintiff demanded judgment against the defendants Joseph Schmaltz and Katherina Schmaltz for the amount due upon the notes together with interest and costs and disbursements of the action; that the judgment be declared a lien upon the real property and the usual decree of foreclosure entered directing a sale of the premises by the sheriff according to law and that the proceeds of such sale be applied upon the judgment. The summons and complaint in the action were delivered by plaintiff’s attorney to Joe Yolk, Jr., the then sheriff of Emmons county, for service. On February 18, 1925 the said Joe Volk, Jr., made his return of service in form as required by law and attached the same to the original summons and complaint reciting that he had on that day served the summons and complaint upon the defendants, Joseph Schmaltz and Katherina Schmaltz within said county of Emmons by delivering a copy of said summons and complaint to said Joseph Schmaltz and Katherina Schmaltz personally. A statement of the sheriff’s fees for service was endorsed upon the return and contained items for delivering copies to each of the defendants and for the necessary mileage incident to making such service. The total *155 bill for services amounted to $19.20, and sucb bill was paid by plaint-tiff’s attorney. Neither of the defendants made any appearance in the action, and on April 27, 1925, judgment was entered by default as prayed for in the complaint, — that is, judgment was rendered against the defendants Joseph Schmaltz and Katherina Schmaltz for the amount due upon the notes, including interest, together with the costs and disbursements of the action; the mortgage was ordered foreclosed and the premises directed to be sold and the proceeds of sale applied upon the judgment. On April 27, 1925 special execution was issued and the land was thereafter, on June 1, 1925, duly sold, pursuant to proceedings had under such execution, to the plaintiff for the sum of $1,000.00. The sheriff made due return on such execution showing a deficiency still due upon the judgment of $2-,753.58. On June 5, 1925, the district court duly entered an-order confirming the sale. On May 29, 1925 the plaintiff commenced a garnishment action seeking to reach certain funds belonging to the defendant Katherina Schmaltz in the hands of the executors of the last will and testament of her deceased father and to have such funds applied upon the judgment in this action. The affidavit for garnishment and the garnishment summons were duly served upon both the defendants, Joseph Schmaltz and Katherina Schmaltz, on May 29, 1929.

No appearance was made by either of the defendants in said garnishment proceeding and no action taken therein until the motion to set aside the judgment under consideration here.

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Bluebook (online)
237 N.W. 644, 61 N.D. 150, 1931 N.D. LEXIS 257, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/first-state-bank-of-strasburg-v-schmaltz-nd-1931.