Jackson v. Gould

72 Me. 335, 1881 Me. LEXIS 95
CourtSupreme Judicial Court of Maine
DecidedJune 7, 1881
StatusPublished

This text of 72 Me. 335 (Jackson v. Gould) 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
Jackson v. Gould, 72 Me. 335, 1881 Me. LEXIS 95 (Me. 1881).

Opinion

SyMOnus, ej.

On the second day of April, 1879, in Knox county, judgment was rendered in favor of the respondent against the petitioner for the sum of $8168.16, debt and costs, and on the sixteenth day of April, 1879, execution therefor issued against, and on May 2, 1879 was levied upon the real estate attached.

The petitioner was not an inhabitant or resident of Maine at the date of the writ and attachment, nor during the pendency of the action, and no service was made upon him before entry. At the return term, September, 1874, after order of notice by publication in a Rockland newspaper, the case was continued. The docket entry at the December term, 1874, shows that the notice ordered in September was proved to have been given, but the action was continued to the March, and again to the September term, 1875, when a now notice by publication in another "Rockland newspaper was ordered, and this order was renewed from term to term till the March term, 1878, when the notice was proved, the action defaulted and continued for judgment. The docket for the September and December terms, 1878, shows only further continuances for judgment, but at the March term, 1879, after the expiration of a year from the date of default, the judgment was rendered and execution issued as at first stated.

The petition for review was entered at the September term, 1879, and by agreement of counsel its statements, so far as they are competent and material, are to be taken as a part of the testimony. They show the non-residence of the petitioner, his absence from the State, that there was no appearance of counsel in his behalf, and that he had no notice of the action till the levy was made. No legal evidence contradicts the statements of the petition on those points. It is not proved that the petitioner received or saw the newspapers containing the notices published by order of the court. Freeman v. Morey, 45 Maine, 50.

The petition asks the court in the exercise of its discretion to grant the review, but in argument it is claimed as of right under R. S., c. 82, § § 3, 4. If it were a matter of right, it was unnecessary to petition for leave. By doing that, the time [338]*338within which it could in any event be of right has passed. The action of review should have been brought, without petition, within the year from judgment rendered, if there was a legal right to be enforced. It. S., c. 89, § 7. The lapse of time has clearly barred the right to review, if one existed. It is now only a question of the use of discretionary power to review the judgment. R. S., c. 82, § 5.

Whether the bond mentioned in R. S., c. 82, § § 4, 5, was given before the execution was procured, or not, does not appear. If this bond was given, there was no irregularity in the issuing of the execution. If the execution issued without it, "through accident, inadvertence or mistake,” under the law of 1877, c. 149, the levy may still be valid unless the judgment is reversed upon review. In either case the defendant in that action, if within the provision of R. S., c. 82, § 4, might bring an action of review as of right during the year therein allowed.

If the third and fourth sections of R. S., c. 82, were considered without reference to their history, a doubt might arise whether they included the case of a defendant, like the present petitioner, who was not an inhabitant of the State during the pendency of the action against him, and had no notice of it. But no such question is raised in the argument. The reason for their application to non-residents, as well as to inhabitants temporarily absent, is equally obvious and strong. The earlier statutes, as we shall see,'show such intention. The act of 1877 indicates that section four was understood by the legislature to refer to all absent defendants without notice, and in Davis v. Stevens, 57 Maine, 593, 599, it was distinctly held to apply to a defendant who "during the pendency of the suit was not an inhabitant of this State, had no notice except by publication, and made no appearance.” The case here presented, therefore, so far as the parties are concerned, falls within the provisions of these sections.

But upon the construction of section four it is claimed that the year within which review is a matter of right dates from the entry of default, not from the final rendering of judgment; that the continuance for judgment for a year after default serves the [339]*339purpose of the statute, gives the absent defendant the year within which to apply for review, and that the date when by the default the charge in the declaration is admitted to be true, not the time of the actual entering and recording of the judgment, should for this purpose be deemed the time of rendering judgment upon default, — the continuance for judgment, it is urged, being in such case only so much delay in making up the judgment and entering it of record. More than a year after default having expired in this case before the petition for review, the petitioner, it is claimed, was not at its date in position to bring an action of review as. a matter of right.

There is one argument in favor of this construction strong-enough to force it upon the court, if it were possible to reconcile it with the language of the statute, and with other provisions ■ of law. It must be conceded that, if this construction is not adopted, the attachment of property, — against which only judgment is rendered in such ease, Eastman v. Wadleigh, 65 Maine, 251, —will always bo lost before execution can be bad upon the judgment "without filing the bond. The attachment expires in thirty days after final judgment in the original suit. The execution without the bond cannot be obtained till one year after such judgment. The statutes, R. S., c. 82, § 126, contain, a special provision that in the cases mentioned in this fourth section the first execution "may he issued not less than one, nor more than two years from the time of judgment,” an exception to the usual limitation of one year for the first execution; but they nowhere provide for the continuance of the attachment in. such cases beyond the ordinary time of thirty days from final judgment. The process of the court, then, unless the sections are construed as the respondent claims, would hold the property at the date of the judgment, but not at the date of the execution. The final process at best could only be valid against the property which had been attached, so far as no superior rights, had intervened between the dissolving of the attachment and the-issuing of the execution. This is a serious difficulty in the construction of section four; but there are reasons which induce us to regard the want of a provision continuing the attachment [340]*340in force during tbe year and till a levy could be'made upon tbe execution as a casus omissus,

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Bluebook (online)
72 Me. 335, 1881 Me. LEXIS 95, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jackson-v-gould-me-1881.