Khoury v. Saik

33 So. 2d 616, 203 Miss. 155, 1948 Miss. LEXIS 244
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 26, 1948
DocketNo. 36657.
StatusPublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 33 So. 2d 616 (Khoury v. Saik) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Khoury v. Saik, 33 So. 2d 616, 203 Miss. 155, 1948 Miss. LEXIS 244 (Mich. 1948).

Opinion

L. A. Smith, Sr., J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

This suit was tried in the Chancery Court of Jones County, wherein appellee as complainant sought cancellation of a certain deed executed by him to Mrs. Latife N. Haik, his mother-in-law, conveying to her certain lands in Jones County. The wife of appellee was dead before and at the time of the litigation, but Vilma Saik, their minor child, was a non-resident of the State of Mississippi and resided in the City of New Orleans, Louisiana, with her aunt, one of the defendants in this cause. The mother-in-law, by will, devised this land to her. grand *160 daughter, the daughter of the appellee, Yilma Saik, and to her two daughters who were also the aunts of Vilma, and with one of whom she lived, as stated. It is not necessary to discuss the pleadings or to set forth the complaint, or the evidence in the case, since we have concluded that the court was without jurisdiction of the minor, and hence the final decree was void, and it must be reversed and the cause remanded for a new trial. The trial court granted the relief sought by appellee, from which adjudication the minor daughter of appellee and her two aunts have appealed here.

After the appeal had been taken by Yilma Saik and her aunts, they filed a motion with the trial court seeking to have the final decree avoided because of their charge that the process upon the minor was insufficient under the statute, and therefore the entire decree should be vacated. This motion was correctly overruled, since at that time the trial court had lost its authority by the appeal to this Court. However, being a jurisdictional matter, it may be raised here for the first time. In the assignment of errors, appellants do raise it by charging the final decree of the trial court to be null and void as to the appellant Yilma Saik, a minor, for the reason that the court lacked jurisdiction of said minor; and that the attempted service of process on the appellant Yilma Saik, a minor, was void; that said minor, Yilma Saik, being a necessary and indispensable party-defendant, the lower court erred in rendering a decree against said minor’s co-defendants without jurisdiction of the minor.

Several different challenges are urged by appellants here in support of their contention that the process upon the minor was void, but we discuss only one of them, since, in our opinion, the process failed because of such defect. As stated, ante, the minor was a non-resident of Mississippi, and was sought to be made a party-defendant under Section 1852, Code of 1942, which provides for summons by publication. It requires that upon the filing of the proper precedent affidavit the' clerk ‘ ‘ shall promptly pre *161 pare and publish a summons to such party to appear and defend the suit, on a rule day in vacation sufficiently distant in time to admit of a due publication thereof, or on the first day of the next regular term if thereby the answer of the defendant would be the earlier required.” The statute requires this summons to be published once in each week during three successive weeks in a public newspaper of a county in which the court is held, if there be one, as there was in this case. We have several times construed this section, and have always held that a constructive service of process thereunder is insufficient to support a decree unless the procedure strictly conforms to the requirements of this section. Moore v. Summerville, 80 Miss. 323, 332, 31 So. 793, 32 So. 294; Mercantile Acceptance Corporation et al. v. Hedgepeth, 147 Miss. 717, 112 So. 872; McCray v. McCray et al., 137 Miss. 160, 102 So. 174; Shelby et al. v. White, 158 Miss. 880, 131 So. 343; Sellers v. Powell, 168 Miss. 682, 152 So. 492; Belt et al. v. Adams, 124 Miss. 194, 86 So. 584.

Section 1217, Code of 1942, provides for the holding of Chancery Court in Jones County, second district, on the Fourth Monday of October, which was, in the case at bar, on October 22, 1945, to which date the process should have been made returnable. On the contrary, it was made returnable the following Monday, or one week later, which was October 29, 1945. It will be noted that Section 1852, supra, directs that the publication process must be made returnable to a rules day, or the first day of a regular term. October 29, 1945, was neither a rules day nor the first day of a regular term, and since strict compliance with this statute has always been deemed necessary in this jurisdiction, we are compelled to- hold that the requirements of the statute were not met by the process here.

The appellee argues that the case of Sweatman et al. v. Dean et al., 86 Miss. 641, 38 So. 231, 232, characterizes this situation as a mere irregularity and holds' process in a similar instance not void. An examination of that *162 cáse reveals that the ^process there was personal, and the attack thereon was collateral, whereas-the process here ■Was- by publication, and since this is an appeal to the Supreme Court from a decree of chancery court, it is a direct attack. Furthermore, the Court held that the process there being personal was amendable. Counsel fbr appellee do not suggest any method whereby publication process may be amended while in course of publication. The Court said in the cited-case: “that some of the-defendants were cited to the second, instead of the first, Monday of the term. The decree' sought to be impeached was rendered at a much later date than the return day, and during the fourth week of the term. At the most this was a mere irregularity, amendable if attention had been called to it, and, if not amended, presenting only the question of error or no error on direct appeal from the decree rendered by the court, but not affecting its validity in á collateral attack.” It may be readily seen, therefore, that the Sweatmán ease is not in point here. Furthermore, it does not appear that any of the defendants in the Sweatman case were minors. -

The case of McCormick Motor Car Company v. McDonald, 153 Miss. 409, 121 So. 121, 123, cited by appellees in support of their position is not pertinent here. It was a collateral attack involving sessions of the court of a jus-' ticé of the peace, which the opinion pointed out “he may change these times and places from time to time, without giving notice to the public except by the docket entry of time and place of holding such court. ”

In the case at bar, the infant defendant Yilma Sáik, filed ah answer, and appeared and testified in court, and it is argued that this cured the above defect in the process, conceding that it be a defect. Minors can'waive nothing. In the law they are helpless, so much so that their representatives can waive nothing for' them, and hence the ánswer and the appearance in court as a witness of this minor could not, and did not, bring Jier into court for the purpose of enabling the entry of a final *163 decree against’her.' In Parker v. Smith et al., 150 Miss. 849, 117 So. 249, 250, if was argued that the minor having’ appeared in person before the court became subject to the jurisdiction thereof, and such appearance would curé any defect in the process. The Court there said: “Conceding that this rule is applicable to adults not under disability, it could have no application to minors.

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Bluebook (online)
33 So. 2d 616, 203 Miss. 155, 1948 Miss. LEXIS 244, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/khoury-v-saik-miss-1948.