Gallagher v. Linwood

231 P. 627, 30 N.M. 211
CourtNew Mexico Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 16, 1924
DocketNo. 2874.
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 231 P. 627 (Gallagher v. Linwood) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Mexico Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gallagher v. Linwood, 231 P. 627, 30 N.M. 211 (N.M. 1924).

Opinions

OPINION OF THE COURT.

BOTTS, J.

The appellant contested the election of the appellee for the office of sheriff of Colfax county. The court, on motion of appellee, struck appellant’s reply, and then sustained appellee’s motion for judgment on the pleadings. The motion to strike the reply was based on two grounds: First, that service of the reply had not been made as required by law; and, second, that the reply was not filed within the time required by law.

Service of the reply was not made by the sheriff or by some one specially appointed by the court to make service, but by a private individual, over the age of 18 years and not a party to the action, who made return by affidavit, from which it appears that he unsuccessfully endeavored to find the appellee at his usual place of abode and elsewhere, and thereupon served the reply on the appellee by securely tacking á copy thereof on the front door of his residence. Section 2076 of the Code of 1915 requires that “a copy of the notice of contest, answer and reply shall be served respectively in the same manner as process is now by law required to be served in an action at law.” This section is a part of the act of January 14, 1876, prescribing the procedure for election contests; and it is argued by appellee that, by the language quoted, the law prescribing the manner in which process should be served, which was in force on January 14, 1876, was adopted as a part of the election contest statute, thereby requiring that service of the reply be made in the manner then prescribed rather than in the manner prescribed by the law in force at the time of making the service, and that the words “in the same manner” include, not only the method of service, but the qualification of the person by whom service is to be made. Appellant, on the other hand, argues that, even though it be conceded that the law prescribing the manner of service in force at the time of the passage of the election contest act is to be followed, yet he was not compelled to look to the law as it then existed for the qualification of the officer or person by whom service should be made.

At the time service of the reply was made, section 4093 of the 1915 Code authorized the service of summons by any person not a party to the action, over the age of 18 years; but the statute in force' at the time of the passage of the election contest statute did not authorize service by a private individual. We have been able to find but one case where the exact question has been passed on. The statutes of Minnesota (Gen. St. 1878, c. 81, § 5) required that, on foreclosure of a mortgage by advertisement, the copy of notice of sale “shall be served in like manner as summons in civil actions in the district court,” and in the case of Kirkpatrick v. Lewis, 46 Minn. 164, 47 N. W. 970, 48 N. W. 783, the Supreme Court of Minnesota held that the language had reference merely to the mode of making service, and not to the persons by whom it might be made. The court said:

"Gen. St. 1878, c. 81, § 5, provides that ‘such notices shall be served in like manner as summons in civil actions m the district court.’ By reference to Gen. St. c. 66, we find that section 56 provides by whom summons in civil actions may be served, to wit, ‘by the sheriff of the county where the defendant is found, or by any other person not a party to the action.’ Also that section 59 provides' how and on whom they shall be served, to wit, ‘by delivering a copy thereof as follows: * * * Fourth. To the defendant, personally, or by leaving a copy at the house of his usual abode,’ etc. We are clearly of the opinion that the words ‘in like manner,’ used in section 5, c. 81, refer only to the mode of service, and not to the persons by whom it may be made; and hence that the provisions of section 56, c. 66, have no application. Among the reasons aside from the literal and natural meaning of the language used, that lead us to the conclusion are the following: Works of practice and codes of procedure, as does chapter 66 of our statutes, invariably treat of the questions by whom service may be made, and the mode and manner of making it, as distinct subjects, thus indicating a general understanding that the latter does not include the former.”

The reason given by the Minnesota court for its conclusion is applicable here, since the mode or manner of making service is treated by chapter 29 of the Revised Statutes and Laws of Territory of 1865, while the officers by whom service may be made are dealt with in chapters 20 and 99 of the Revised Statutes of that year. These statutes were in force at the time the election contest law was adopted, as was also the Act of January 31, 1867 (Laws 1866-67, p. 106) providing for the service of process when there should be a vacancy in the office of sheriff, or when the sheriff should be a party to the suit, or otherwise disqualified. Section 4 of said chapter 20 is in the following language :

"Sec. 4. It shall be the duty of the clerk of the district court, in all causes not otherwise provided for, to issue all process to the sheriff of the county in which the trial or cause shall be commenced. or presented, or in which final sentence shall be rendered; and it shall be the duty of the sheriff to execute faithfully such process, and return the same to the said court, as provided by law.”

Section 2 of said chapter 99 is as follows:

‘‘Sec. 2. All process issued by the clerks of the circuit court, and by the clerks o,; the perfects, shall be directed to the sheriff of their respective counties, who shall execute such process according to law, and shall attend upon such courts during their sittings.”

Section 1 of chapter 29, under the subhead “How Process Served,” is as follows:

“Section 1. That all original process from any of the courts in this territory shall be executed by the .proper officer as follows: * * * Fourth. If no such person shall be found willing to accept a copy of the process as above provided for, then by posting the same in the most public part of the defendant’s premises. * * ’ ”

It is observed that by said chapter 20 it is made the duty of the sheriff to execute process “as provided by law,” and by chapter 99 it is made his duty to execute the process “according to law.” The meaning of the sections would not have been changed in the least had they required in each instance that the sheriff executed process “in the manner required by law,” and, in order to ascertain the manner of service which the law required, reference must be made to a widely separated chapter of the Revised Statutes, where the different methods or modes of making service are prescribed. From this we conclude that, when the Legislature required service to be made "in the same manner as process is now by law required to be served in an acton at law,” it was the intention to prescribe the method or mode of making service, without reference to the person or officer by whom such service should be made.

Appellee relies on Brunleve v. Cronan, 176 Ky. 818, 197 S. W. 498. While it appears therefrom that the Kentucky election contest statute requires the notice of contest to be "served in the same manner as a summons from the circuit court,” the question now before us was not considered by the court.

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Bluebook (online)
231 P. 627, 30 N.M. 211, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gallagher-v-linwood-nm-1924.