Husband v. Crockett

115 S.W.2d 882, 195 Ark. 1031, 1938 Ark. LEXIS 130
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedApril 11, 1938
Docket4-5003
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 115 S.W.2d 882 (Husband v. Crockett) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Husband v. Crockett, 115 S.W.2d 882, 195 Ark. 1031, 1938 Ark. LEXIS 130 (Ark. 1938).

Opinion

Smith, J.

F. L. and Edna Y. Husband, who are husband and wife, executed, on February 11, 1928, their joint note to Hattie S. Crockett for the purchase price of certain lands located in the Osceola district of Mississippi county. The implication from the testimony is, that the title was taken in the name of Mrs. Husband, but we do not regard this fact as of controlling* importance. A deed of trust was executed by the purchasers to. secure the payment of the note, which was for the sum of $1,690, and upon default in payment a foreclosure suit was filed in the Osceola district of the county. A decree of foreclosure was rendered without any answer having been filed, ¡pursuant to" which the land was sold by the commissioner appo.ihted.tp make the sale for the sum of $500. The sale was made October 25, 1930, and the report thereof was approved,' as was the commissioner’s deed. There was a deficiency judgment for the balance dne after the proceeds of the foreclosure sale had been credited thereon.

Dr. and Mrs. Husband lived in Blytheville, which is in the Chickasawba district of Mississippi county, and resided in a hotel which they formerly owned. The doctor had his office on the ground floor of the hotel and lived in rooms on the second floor. Mrs. Husband owned other lands in Arkansas, and also owned lands in Pemis-cott county, Missouri.

Mrs. Crockett brought suit in Missouri on this deficiency judgment at the March, 1936, term of the Pemis-cott county circuit court. Dr. Husband made no defense, but his wife defended upon the ground that the judgment against her had been rendered without service of process upon her, and that the judgment had been rendered in the Osceola district of Mississippi county, whereas* while a resident of that county, she had resided in the Chioka-sawba district thereof, in which last named district the summons purported to have been served.

The circuit court in Missouri rendered judgment against Dr. Husband for the amount of the Arkansas judgment, but dismissed the case against Mrs. Husband. In so doing the court made certain findings of fact and declarations of law. The court was of the opinion that the personal judgment was rendered against Mrs. Husband without jurisdiction of her person in the Osceola district of Mississippi county, even though she had been served with summons while residing in the Chickasawba district thereof; but the court further found that Mrs. Husband had not been served with summons, and that the personal judgment against her was void for that reason.

Subsequent to this judgment of the Missouri circuit court, Mrs. Crockett caused an execution to be issued by the clerk at Osceola, which was levied upon certain lands and chattels belonging to Mrs. Husband in Mississippi county.

On February 26, 1937, Mrs. Husband filed in the Osceola chancery court a motion to vacate and set aside the original decree of foreclosure and to quash the execution which had been levied upon her property, for the reason that the judgment and decree" had been rendered without service upon her, and:that-she was not advised, of the rendition of this decree until- about January 1, 1936. She alleged that the-lands had been sold at. the foreclosure sale for a grossly inadequate price.- The chancellor dismissed as being without equity the motion to vacate the foreclosure decree and sale, and from that decree is this appeal.

. In our opinion the finding of the chancellor that the decree was- not rendered without service upon Mrs. Husband is not contrary to the preponderance of- the evidence-; nor do .we think that the judgment of the circuit court of Missouri is conclusive of that issue;-nor do we think that the chancery court of the Qsceola district of Mississippi county.was without jurisdiction to render personal judgment against Mrs. Husband upon service of process .had upon her in the Chickasawba district of Mississippi county.

The return.of the sheriff upon the writ of summons in the original foreclosure proceeding reads as follows: “State of Arkansas, county of.Mississippi—

‘ ■' 1 “On the 19th day of August;-1930,1 have duly served the- within writ hy delivering a copy and stating the sub--stanee thereof to- -the within named F. L. Husband and Edna Y. Husband,-at her1-usual place of abode in the city of Blytheville,' Arkansas', with F. L. Husband, her husband, a member of her-family over the age of fifteen years, as I am' herein commanded.
“W. W. Shaver, Sheriff.
“By A. Lindsey, D. S.’*

The testimony is to the effect that at the time of the date of this return- of service a partial estrangement- had grown up between Dr. Husband and his wife and they had agreed to live apart, and Mrs. 'Husbahd'h-ad returned to her former home in the state óf Mississippi, where she actually was on August 19,1930, and where she continued to reside until September, 1931., No divorce was contemplated and -neither party filed suit for-, that purpose. They were later reconciled to each.other and are mow living together in the same hotel where they ..formerly resided. As a matter of fact, they lived apart about a year and a half. The testimony is very, clear that during this interval their relations were not entirely severed. A', correspondence between them was conducted. Mrs. Husband made several trips to Blytheville, and on each oceasion stayed at the hotel where Dr. Husband then resided and where both had-, formerly .. Jived. Mrs. Husband owned extensive landed ■ -interest?. < both in Mississippi-county, Arkansas, and in the .state of Missouri, and Dr. Husband remained in charge of these lands as the agent of his wife, renting them out and collecting the rents' thereon. In October, 193Ó, on the occasion of one of these, return visits to Blytheville by Mrs. Husband, she and.her. husband talked over her affairs, and he advised her that she was losing her property through mortgage. foreclosures and tax sales. It does not appear whether the suit of Mrs. Crockett was discussed. Mrs. Husband spent about four days at the hotel during this visit. "Mrs., Husband was asked if, during her visits tó' Blytheville and the stay at the hotel where her husband resided, she and her husband cohabited together, and she answered: “That comes under the head of our business,” although, after further cross-examination, she stated they had.riot.

We think this testimony supports the-finding that the relation of husband and wife subsisted when the summons was served, and that the hotel was their place of residence, as it had formerly been, and now appears again to be. ,

Section 1360, Pope’s Digest, provides how service of summons may be had, and paragraph three of that section reads as follows: “By leaving a copy of such summons at the usual place of abode of the defendant,, with, some person who is a member of his family over the age of fifteen years.”

Dr. Husband was, of course, a member of his wife’s family within the meaning of this section, and no insistence is made that he was not then over fifteen years of age. The statute makes no distinction as to the character of the place of abode,.and requires only that it shall be the usual place of abode. The fact that Dr.

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Bluebook (online)
115 S.W.2d 882, 195 Ark. 1031, 1938 Ark. LEXIS 130, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/husband-v-crockett-ark-1938.