Knapp, Burrell & Co. v. King

6 Or. 243
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 15, 1877
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 6 Or. 243 (Knapp, Burrell & Co. v. King) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Knapp, Burrell & Co. v. King, 6 Or. 243 (Or. 1877).

Opinion

By the Court, Boise, J.:

On the sixth day of November, 1876, Knapp, Burrell & Co. recovered a judgment against Edward Price and W. C. Price, in the county court of Benton county, for the sum of one hundred and sixteen dollars and costs, the whole amounting to the sum of one hundred and sixty dollars. On the twenty-fifth of November, 1876, an execution was issued on said judgment, and delivered to the respondent, Sol. King, then sheriff of said county; for service, and the complaint alleges that said Edward and W. C. Price were then the owners of certain personal property described in the complaint. That the said property was known to said Sol. King at the time he received the execution', and that the plaintiff requested him to levy on the same, but that he neglected and refused to do so, and returned said execution on the twelfth day of December, 1876, with the indorsement [244]*244thereon that no property of the defendants was found. Plaintiff alleges that such return was false, and that by reason of his neglecting to make the levy they are damaged the sum of one hundred and sixty dollars, and alleges that the said property was of the value of three hundred dollars. The answer admits that the property named in complaint was of the value of one hundred and seventy-seven dollars and fifty cents, .but denies any greater value; denies that "W. C. Price had any interest whatever in said property; and denies that said return on the execution was false. The answer then sets up as a separate defense:

That on the twenty-third day of August, 1876, defendant, Sol. King, commenced an action in a justice’s court for precinct number two of Benton county, against said Edward Price. That a writ of attachment was duly issued in said action, and that this same property named in complaint was duly levied on by virtue of said writ of attachment. That afterwards, on the sixth day of November, 1876, judgment was duly rendered in said action in favor of said Sol. King against said Edward Price for the sum of two hundred and six dollars and fifty cents and costs.

That on the twenty-fifth day of November, 1876, execution was issued on this judgment, and said property sold, under and by virtue of said execution. The answer sets out that service was had in said action by a publication of the summons against the defendant, he being a non-resident of the state, and alleges that Hinkle, the constable who levied the attachment, returned the same with the indorsement thereon that the defendant could not be found.

The replication denies that such action was commenced; that Hinkle was constable; that he attached the property; that he returned the summons into court indorsed that defendant, Price, could not be found. Denies that at the time the execution of plaintiff was placed in the hands of said Sol. King, said property was in the hands of said constable, by virtue of an execution issued in said action of Sol. King v. Edward Price.

In the argument in this case it was not seriously contended that the goods in question were not attached on the [245]*245twenty-third of August, 1876, by virtue of the writ of attachment issued in the action then commenced of Sol. King v. Edward Price. But appellants claim that such action terminated on the ninth day of September, for on that day the said justice entered a judgment for the plaintiff, Sol. King, and that although such judgment was rendered without jurisdiction of the person of Edward Price, the defendant therein, and therefore void, yet such determination ended the case, and that the justice could not afterwards, on the eighteenth day of September, issue an alias summons on the complaint filed on the twenty-third of August. That is, that the jurisdiction of the justice over the subject-matter of the action was lost; and that the attachment was dissolved on the entry of the said judgment, as the justice did not then continue the action to any future time, and therefore all rights under it were lost.'

This is a question of considerable interest and importance, and has been ably argued and presented to the court by counsel, and many authorities cited. We have carefully examined these authorities, and find the opinions expressed in them based on the statutes of the several states in which they were announced, and it is held by them that proceedings before justices of the peace are almost exclusively prescribed and regulated by statute. And, in deciding this important matter, it will be necessary to examine the provisions of our own statute on this subject. On page 108, section 15, it is provided that an action shall be deemed commenced when the complaint is filed and the summons delivered to the officer with intent that it shall be actually served. But such attempt to commence the action shall be followed by the first publication of the summons or the service thereof within sixty days. This is the provision of the code, and will control actions in justices’ courts unless modified by the act regulating proceedings in justices’ courts. (Stat, 284, sec. 880.) But section 15 of the code is modified as to what shall be deemed a commencement of an action in a justice’s court by section 23, page 465, which provides: “The complaint must be made or filed before the issuing of the summons, and such making or filing is the [246]*246commencement of the action.” And from the filing of the complaint the action is pending in thejustice’s court, and will continue so pending until disposed of in the same manner. In the circuit court it would abate if the summons was not served or published within sixty days; and it may be that such neglect to proceed to obtain jurisdiction of the person, would also terminate an action in a justice’s court so as to dissolve an attachment issued therein; but this question does not arise in this case, for the reason that the first publication was within sixty days from the twenty-eighth of August, and therefore the action would not abate on that account.

It is not contended that the action of King v. Price was not commenced and pending at one time, and the only question in this branch of the case is, Did it terminate on the rendition by the justice of the void judgment on the ninth of September, 1876, the day on which the first summons was made returnable ?

The statute, p. 284, sec. 879, provides: “ A justice’s court is a court held by a justice of the peace within the precinct for which he is chosen.' There are no particular terms of such court, but the same is always open for the transaction of business.” So that, when the court once acquires jurisdiction of the subject-matter of an action, there is always a court to exercise such jurisdiction until it is terminated in some legal manner. After jurisdiction is acquired by filing the complaint, the court has only power to review an amended complaint, or dismiss the case on motion of complainant, except to issue process to acquire jurisdiction of defendant, or to issue mesne or auxiliary processes, such as attachments or the like. Until he acquires jurisdiction of the defendant, he can render no valid judgment against him.

If he render judgment against defendant without jurisdiction of his person, it is simply void and no judgment, and can be disregarded in any collateral proceeding when such want of jurisdiction appears on the record. And in this case the judgment rendered on the ninth of September was a mere nullity, and did not affect the standing of the case, and the case then stood in the same manner as though [247]*247the summons had been returned indorsed

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
6 Or. 243, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/knapp-burrell-co-v-king-or-1877.