Hetletved v. Hansen

256 N.W.2d 360, 1977 N.D. LEXIS 153
CourtNorth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 27, 1977
DocketCiv. 9339
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 256 N.W.2d 360 (Hetletved v. Hansen) 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
Hetletved v. Hansen, 256 N.W.2d 360, 1977 N.D. LEXIS 153 (N.D. 1977).

Opinion

SAND, Justice.

Defendant Robert Hansen brought this appeal from an order of the district court of Grand Forks County refusing to recognize his efforts to obtain a change of venue from Grand Forks County to Cass County, the place of his residence.

The action originated with a complaint against Hansen by Clois Hetletved seeking damages for assault and battery. The complaint venued the action in Grand Forks County. Within twenty days of service of the summons and complaint, counsel for Hansen, by letter dated 27 September 1976, sent an answer and affidavit to counsel for Hetletved. The affidavit, minus caption and verification, read as follows:

“Robert Lowell Hanse [sic ], being first duly sworn, sayeth:
“My name is Robert Lowell Hansen and I am a resident of Fargo, Cass County, North Dakota. I have been a resident of Cass County, North Dakota, since before the service of the Summons and Complaint upon me in the above styled action.
“This Affidavit is prepared pursuant to 28-04-05 N.D.C.C. and 28-04-06 N.D. C.C.
“Dated this 27th day of September, 1976.
“Robert Lowell Hansen”

In the letter transmitting the answer and affidavit Hansen’s counsel stated:

“Enclosed herein please find my Answer along with an Affidavit from Mr. Hansen stating that he is a resident of Cass County. I may be wrong, but I am led to believe that 28-04-05 and -06 of the Century Code envision that we can venue this action in Cass County rather than in Grand Forks since Mr. Hansen was a resident here at the time of the service of process. Am I right?”

The note of issue was filed by Hetletved on 12 October 1976. On 27 October 1976 Hansen filed his answer, along with an affidavit, and proposed order for change of venue with the district court. The district judge refused to sign Hansen’s proposed order and returned it unsigned by letter dated 15 November 1976. Hansen’s counsel requested reconsideration of the matter and on 17 November 1976 filed a motion for change of venue, together with his affidavit, memorandum of law, and stipulation of facts. The change of venue was again denied by order of the court dated 22 February 1977.

The change of venue was denied for failure of Hansen to make a demand in writing within twenty days of the service of the complaint as required by § 28-04-06, North Dakota Century Code, which provides:

“Except in the cases mentioned in section 28-04-01, if the county designated in the complaint is not the proper county for trial of the case, the action, notwithstanding, may be tried therein, unless the defendant before the time for answering expires demands in writing that the trial be had in the proper county and the place of trial thereupon is changed by consent of the parties, or by order of the court.”

The issue before us is whether Hansen’s affidavit dated 27 September 1976 was sufficient to comply with the “demand in writing” requirement of the statute. We confine ourselves to examination of the affidavit only, because other steps taken by Hansen were not accomplished within the twenty-day answering period specified in § 28-04-01. Those additional efforts were thus ineffective for lack of timeliness alone.

*362 Both parties agree that the affidavit was intended to effect a change of the place of trial to the county of defendant’s residence, but disagree as to whether it in fact accomplished that end. Although this Court has decided a number of procedural questions regarding change of venue, we have not addressed the issue of what is necessary to satisfy the statutory written demand requirement.

In examining other authorities, we give particular significance to early cases in California based upon its Civil Code § 396 from which the North Dakota statute quoted above was derived. Until amended in 1933, the California Code provided, as does § 28-04-06, NDCC, that if the action is not commenced in the proper court the defendant in order to obtain a change of venue must first make a demand in writing.

In Pennie v. Visher, 94 Cal. 323, 29 P. 711 (1892), a motion for change of venue was denied where a notice of motion for change of venue was given supported by an affidavit. The court stated:

“We think the grounds specified for a change of the place of trial insufficient; and, were they not, there does not appear to have been a demand for the change in writing, such as is required by section 396 of the Code of Civil Procedure.”

A demand was held to be sufficient in Buck v. City of Eureka, 97 Cal. 135, 31 P. 845 (1893), where the form signed by the defendant’s attorneys said “We hereby demand that the place of trial of this cause be changed to the proper county . . . The court said that there was not only a notice of motion but a demand in writing, with the only objection being that the demand was made by the defendant’s attorneys rather than the defendant himself. Although there may not have been formal compliance with the literal terms of the statute, the court held the attorneys “satisfied its reason by a substantial compliance, and that is sufficient.”

In Hanna v. DeKoch, 52 Cal.App. 389, 198 P. 1006 (1921), the defendant conceded that she had not presented a demand for change of venue in precise terms but contended that a demand was substantially made in other papers filed in the proceeding, particularly a petition for change and a notice of hearing. The court rejected this argument and affirmed the order denying her motion, saying:

“We discover nothing in these papers to differentiate them from others of their kind, and to determine that their contents obviated the necessity for a demand would be to hold that no demand is necessary in any proceeding for change. A petition, or motion, in such a proceeding will always acquaint the other party with the fact that a change is desired, but that is not sufficient. The statute specifically requires that, in addition to the moving papers, a demand be made . . . and we cannot legislate the provision out of existence.”

Nevada, like North Dakota, adopted its venue statutes from those of California and the language remains substantially identical to that in North Dakota. A corporate defendant was held to have waived its right to have trial in the county of residence by failing to demand in writing that venue be changed as required by the statute in Nevada Transit Co. v. Harris Brothers Lumber Co., 80 Nev. 465, 396 P.2d 133 (1964). In that case a motion for change of venue was filed along with an affidavit.

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Bluebook (online)
256 N.W.2d 360, 1977 N.D. LEXIS 153, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hetletved-v-hansen-nd-1977.