Higley v. Pollock

27 P. 895, 21 Nev. 198
CourtNevada Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 5, 1891
DocketNo. 1341.
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 27 P. 895 (Higley v. Pollock) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nevada Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Higley v. Pollock, 27 P. 895, 21 Nev. 198 (Neb. 1891).

Opinions

By the Court,

Mukphy, J.:

This action was brought by the plaintiffs to recover the sum of one thousand eight hundred dollars, alleged to be due from the defendant for work, labor and services as housekeeper rendered by Mary Jane Higley, and for two horses sold and delivered by the said Mary Jane Higley to the defendant. Summons was issued and served with a certified copy of the complaint on the defendant, by the sheriff of Lander county, in • said count}', on the 23d day of June, 1890. On the 2d day of July, 1890, the defendant, by his attorney, appeared and filed the following notice of motion: “Now comes the defendant above named and moves this honorable court to quasli the summons and service thereof on the defendant (and appears for this purpose only) on the grounds: First. That the copy of the summons, if such it is, fails to show that it is a copy of the original summons herein issued, and that said copy of summons which is served on this defendant does not appear on its face to be a copy of the said original summons issued in this cause by any proper authentication. That said summons issued in this cause fails to give this defendant any legal or proper notice required according to law.”

We cannot consider the first objection raised, because the copy of the summons complained of is not embodied in the transcript; and the certificate of the sheriff’s return indorsed upon the original summons, which is set out in full in the record, sets forth the facts that the sheriff did serve the defendant, “ by delivering to said defendant a true copy of the summons, attached to a certified copy of the complaint in this action.” *201 The mere statement of an attorney will not be taken to contradict such a return.

The second objection, in our opinion, is not well taken.- It is argued by the attorney for the appellant that the summons is defective, in that it does not conform to the first subdivision -of See. 3018, Gen. Stat. Nev., which reads as follows : “First. In actions arising' on contract for the recovery only of money ■or damages, that the plaintiff will take judgment for a sum -specified therein if the defendant fails to answer the complaint.” The summons in this ease gives correctly the title of the court, the names of the parties to the action, and notifies the defendant ■of the time and place in which he Was to appear and answer; or-> if he failed to appear within the time specified in said summons, judgment by default would be taken against him according to the prayer of the complaint.

The cause of action is stated in the summons as follows-: ■“ The said action is brought to recover judgment against you £the defendant^], for the sum of eighteen hundred dollars, alleged to be due from you £said defendant^], to said plaintiff, as follows, to-wit: One thousand five hundred dollars for labor and services and three hundred dollars, the value of two horses sold and delivered to you at your special instance and request —all of which will more fully and at large appear in the complaint on file herein, a certified copy of which will be served on you with this summons. And you are hereby notified that if you fail to appear and answer the said complaint as above required, the said plaintiff will take default and judgment against you in accordance with the prayer of said complaint, and for costs of this su.it.”

The contention of the attorney for the appellant is that the failure to specify the amount for which judgment would be taken after the word “you” and before the italicized words, the summons is defective and should have been quashed, because it did not give the defendant legal or proper notice as required by law. A proceeding for the price of goods or chattels, and the price or value of labor is a proceeding to enforce a contract, either express or implied, by which the defendant is bound to pay for the goods or labor a sum certain by the agreement, or capable of being reduced to certainty by mere calculation from the elements which the agreements contain.

*202 This action is therefore on contract and brought for its performance by the payment of a sum of money which, by its terms, is required of the defendant, and is such a case as falls within the first subdivision of the statute in relation to what the summons shall contain. The section of the statute under consideration is a copy of the New York and California statutes. In New York, civil actions were commenced by the service of summons. A copy of the complaint was not required to be served with the summons; and the courts in that state have held that when the summons was served before a copy of the complaint, it was essential for the ¡deader to be particularly careful to state in his summons the nature of the relief that he should demand of the court; or, in other words the pleader would not be permitted to state in his summons that he would apply to the court for the relief granted under the second subdivision of section 129 of the New York statute, and when the defendant would examine the complaint he would find that the prayer thereof asked for the relief granted under the first subdivision of said section. Under such circumstances, the pleader was required to amend the prayer of liis complaint to conform to the summons, or amend the summons to conform to the complaint. But we fail to find any well-considered case where the summons and complaint were served at the same time, and the prayer of the complaint asked for the relief granted under the proper subdivision of the statute, and the summons set forth that upon the failure of the defendant to answer, the plaintiff would take judgment in accordance with the prayer of the complaint, holding such summons to be insufficient.

In the case of Brown v. Eaton, before the supreme court of New York, 37 How. Pr. 325, Morgan, J., speaking for the court, said: “ When the summons is served before the complaint, and contains a notice under the first subdivision’of section 129, and the complaint sets out a cause of action under the second subdivision, it is held by several authorities to be such an irregularity as to require the court to set aside the complaint on motion of the defendant; and it seems to' be pretty well established that such an irregularity is not cured or waived by a general appearance in the action. It has been doubted, however, whether the same rule will be applied when the notice in the summons is under the second subdivision, and the cause of action in the complaint authorizes judgment, without such *203 application, under tlie first subdivision. * * * The decisions cited by the counsel are niostly the individual views of judges at special term, and are by no means uniform or consistent with each other. If the defendant may be prejudiced by the supposed irregularity, I see no reason why he may not appear and move to set aside the complaint. If he cannot be prejudiced by it, there is no reason why he should be heard at all.

It is evident that the defendant cannot be misled bv' the form of notice in the summons, when the summons and complaint are served together.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Price v. Brimacombe
72 P.2d 1107 (Nevada Supreme Court, 1937)
O'Neill v. Lang Transp. Corp.
19 F. Supp. 477 (D. Nevada, 1937)
Camino v. Lewis
284 P. 766 (Nevada Supreme Court, 1930)
Central Deep Creek Orchard Co. v. C. C. Taft Co.
202 P. 1062 (Idaho Supreme Court, 1921)
Sage Investment Co. v. Haley
59 Colo. 504 (Supreme Court of Colorado, 1915)
López v. Meléndez
22 P.R. 145 (Supreme Court of Puerto Rico, 1915)
Griffing v. Smith
26 Colo. App. 220 (Colorado Court of Appeals, 1914)
Esden v. May
36 Nev. 611 (Nevada Supreme Court, 1913)
Naderhoff v. Geo. Benz & Sons
141 N.W. 501 (North Dakota Supreme Court, 1913)
First Nat. Bank v. Rusk
127 P. 780 (Oregon Supreme Court, 1912)
Golden v. Murphy
31 Nev. 395 (Nevada Supreme Court, 1909)
Stanley v. Rachofsky
93 P. 354 (Oregon Supreme Court, 1908)
Mantle v. Casey
78 P. 591 (Montana Supreme Court, 1904)
Prezeau v. Spooner
35 P. 514 (Nevada Supreme Court, 1894)
HAYES v. JAMES.
27 P. 894 (Colorado Court of Appeals, 1891)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
27 P. 895, 21 Nev. 198, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/higley-v-pollock-nev-1891.