Hersey v. Weeman

113 A. 394, 120 Me. 256, 1921 Me. LEXIS 46
CourtSupreme Judicial Court of Maine
DecidedMay 2, 1921
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 113 A. 394 (Hersey v. Weeman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Judicial Court of Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hersey v. Weeman, 113 A. 394, 120 Me. 256, 1921 Me. LEXIS 46 (Me. 1921).

Opinion

Morrill, J.

The plaintiff seeks to reverse a judgment rendered against him in favor of the defendant in error at the December term, 1919, in the Superior Court of Cumberland County, and in his writ specifies two alleged errors. The case is before us upon exceptions to a ruling sustaining a demurrer.

The first specification of error is that the Superior Court had no jurisdiction to render the judgment in question “because the writ in said action and upon which said judgment was based was not served on said Hersey in the manner provided by law and the statutes in such case made and provided, or at all, and said Hersey had not appeared in said action.” To this specification the defendant in error demurs and for ground of demurrer alleges “that the plaintiff in error has alleged causes of error which would have entitled him, the said plaintiff in error, to a remedy by review, and that as a matter of law, his writ of error is insufficient, because a remedy by review is open to him.”

This contention of the defendant in error may be stated thus, that a judgment debtor, who has been defaulted without service upon him or appearance by or for him, cannot maintain a writ of error to reverse the judgment, but must have recourse to proceedings in review.

We cannot accede to that proposition; we think the law is otherwise.

We may say in passing that the provision of K. S., Chap. 82, Sec. 97, — “Final judgments in said Superior Courts may be reexamined in the Supreme Judicial Court on a writ of error or on petition for review,” — only indicates the intention of the Legislature as to the forum in which writs of error and petitions for review may be entertained. The rules of law and practice which determine [258]*258whether a judgment may be re-examined by writ of error or by petition for review still obtain, and although the forum for examining .final judgments rendered in the Superior Courts, is declared to be the Supreme Judicial Court, yet that is a declaration of forum only, and not a declaration giving a choice of procedure.

It is undoubtedly true that when a defendant has been duly served with process and has had full opportunity to protect his rights by appeal or by exceptions, and has failed or neglected to do so, he cannot afterwards raise the same questions upon a writ of error. So when a defendant has been duly served with process but through mistake or accident has not had notice of the action or has failed to appear, his remedy is by proceedings in review. But we are not aware that these principles have been extended, and we think that .they should not be extended, to cases where the record shows no legal service of the writ, and no appearancé by the defendant, in the original action.

In Jewell v. Brown, 33 Maine, 250 the court said: “By suffering judgment by default, a party may admit the justice of the claim, but he does not thereby admit the jurisdiction of the court, or the correctness of the proceedings to establish and enforce the claim. He may safely rest upon the assumption that, unless the process be legal, and the service sufficient, and the jurisdiction certain, no judgment will be rendered against him; or if from fraud, accident or mistake, a judgment should be erroneously entered, that the whole may be revised on error.....

The rule, therefore, that a party who had the right of appeal, cannot bring error, is subject to qualifications. If he was not duly served with legal process, .... and an erroneous judgment has , been rendered against him on .default, he may have remedy by writ of error.” This statement is to be taken with the further qualification that there has been no appearance by or for the defendant, in the original action, the defendant thereby submitting himself to the jurisdiction of the court.

In Weston v. Palmer, 51 Maine, 73, Judge Walton quoted Chief Justice Dana in Skipwith v. Hill, 2 Mass., 35, as follows: “I take it to have been decided, generally, that where a party has a right of appeal to this court, and will not avail himself of it, he shall not afterwards be allowed his writ of error. Perhaps the rule has never teen extended to a judgment on default, where no personal notice of the [259]*259suit has been given. But where, after legal notice of the action in the lower court, a defendant suffers himself to be defaulted, he ought not to be permitted to lie by, and at any time within twenty years come in and reverse the judgment for a cause of which he might have availed himself in the original suit.” Judge Walton proceeds in his opinion as follows: “In that case the judgment was reversed, because the defendant had had no notice of the suit, as appears by the remarks of Mr. Justice Sedgwick. The rule is now well settled that a writ of error will not lie, where the party has had an opportunity to appeal. The rule is not applicable to cases where the defendant is an infant, or a person non compos mentis, for such persons are regarded as incapable of appealing, or doing any other act necessary to protect themselves against a groundless suit; nor does it apply to suits where there has been no legal service of the writ.”

The first of these exceptions, relating to an infant was recognized in Easton v. Eaton, 112 Maine, 106.

The reason for the last exception or qualification is thus stated by Chief Justice Shaw in Bodurtha v. Goodrich, 3 Gray, 508:

“The first answer of the defendant in error to this, and a plausible one certainly, is that the remedy is by writ of review. But the objection goes deeper than the service, and the mere want of notice, and is that the court has no jurisdiction. The ground of the plaintiff in error is, not that he had a good defense which he might have made if he had had notice; but that he was not amenable to the jurisdiction of the court, and not bound to make any defense. If he should come in and petition for a review, or sue out a writ of review as of right, he would thereby submit himself to the jurisdiction of the court and be obliged upon his review, if granted, to meet the trial on the merits, which he says he was not bound to do.”

The fact that the plaintiff in error in that case was a non-resident can majte no difference. Johnson v. Thaxter, 12 Gray, 200; in which, we think the law is correctly stated thus:

“A writ of review is a proper remedy to correct an error in a judgment, when the statute has been complied with by causing the writ to be properly served, but through some mistake or accident the defendant has not had notice of the action. In such action the court has jurisdiction of the case and can proceed to render a proper judgment. But this cannot be done where there has been no legal service of the writ. An essential pre-requisite to enable the court to take [260]*260cognizance of the case is wanting, and no valid judgment can be rendered against the defendant, and if one is rendered, it is erroneous and liable to reversal on error.” See also Smith v. Paige, 4 Allen, 94.

In Thompson v. Mason,

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Bluebook (online)
113 A. 394, 120 Me. 256, 1921 Me. LEXIS 46, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hersey-v-weeman-me-1921.