Lawson v. Dunseath

170 P. 19, 41 Nev. 321
CourtNevada Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 15, 1918
DocketNo. 2271
StatusPublished

This text of 170 P. 19 (Lawson v. Dunseath) 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
Lawson v. Dunseath, 170 P. 19, 41 Nev. 321 (Neb. 1918).

Opinions

By the Court,

McCarran, C. J.:

This is an appeal from a judgment and order dismissing a petition for a writ of certiorari.

On petition of the appellant, the district court issued [323]*323an order to show cause, addressed to Harry Dunseath, justice of the peace of Tonopah township,by which order that officer was required to appear and show cause, if any he had, why the proceedings mentioned and described in the petition for the order should not be quashed, vacated, and set aside, and that the justice of the peace produce before the district court on said hearing the entire original documents, papers, and files pertaining to the proceedings mentioned in the petition or a transcript or true copy thereof, without changes, additions, or corrections, etc. The appeal is based upon three assignments of error. We need determine but one, i. e.:

“I. The holding of the lower court that the complaint in the case of Bailey v. Lawson was actually filed, and said action duly commenced, there being no indorsement upon said complaint as required by law.”

It appears that one Bailey had attempted to commence an action in the justice’s court of Tonopah' township against the appellant, Lawson. The steps taken to commence the action in the justice’s court, as disclosed by the return of the justice in response to the order to show cause, appear as follows: An instrument entitled a complaint, on which no file marks or indorsement of any kind appear. The instrument is entitled:

“In the Justice’s Court of Tonopah Township, Nye County, Nevada. George L. Bailey, Plaintiff, v. J. W. Lawson, Defendant. Complaint.”

The certified copy of the justice’s docket filed in the lower court pursuant to the order to show cause, after an entitlement of the case in the same caption as that of the complaint, shows among other things, the following entries:

“Date, 8 — 23—15. Demand, $271. Date, 8 — 23—15. Complaint filed. Case docketed. Summons issued.”

It is the contention of appellant here under his first assignment of error that, inasmuch as no indorsement appears upon the complaint filed in the justice’s court setting forth the date upon which complaint Was filed, [324]*324no action was commenced in that court as contemplated by the provisions of our civil practice act.

The manner in which an action is commenced in a justice’s court is governed, controlled, and prescribed, as we view it, by two sections of our civil practice act.

Section 780 (Rev. Laws, 5722), is as follows:

“An action in a justice’s court is commenced by filing a complaint and the issuance of a summons thereon.”
“The court must indorse on the complaint the date upon which it was filed, and at any time within one year thereafter the plaintiff may have summons issued.”

From these two sections it appears manifest, first, that an action in a justice’s court is commenced when three affirmative acts have been accomplished by the justice of the peace, namely: First, the filing of the complaint; second, the making of an indorsement on the complaint setting forth the date upon which it was filed; third, the issuance of a summons signed by the justice. (Rev. Laws, 5727.)

Section 780 of the civil practice act makes clear that an action in a justice’s court is commenced only when a complaint is filed and a summons issued. When may a summons be issued? This query is answered by the succeeding section (section 781, C. P.). By that section the issuance of a summons is made directly contingent upon the second affirmative act required of the justice of the peace, namely, the indorsement on the complaint setting forth the date on which it was filed. It is “at any time within one year thereafter” that “the plaintiff may have summons issued.” The term “thereafter” refers directly to the act of indorsement, and it is not until after indorsement of the complaint by the justice setting forth the date of its filing that summons can be issued. A complaint unindorsed by the justice as prescribed by this section cannot constitute a basis for the issuance of a summons, but a complaint when filed and indorsed as prescribed by sections 780 and 781 may constitute the basis for the issuance of a summons by the [325]*325plaintiff at any time within one year after indorsement. It is the contention of respondent, and in that contention he was upheld by the court below, that the issuance of a summons is contingent rather upon the filing of the complaint. The term “filing,” as here used, may mean the mere acceptance or receipt of the instrument by the officer. If it were the intention of the legislative body to have the issuance of summons contingent upon the act of filing, that is, contingent upon the mere receipt and acceptance of the complaint by the j ustice, it would have been a simple matter to have transferred the clause “and at any time within one year thereafter the plaintiff may have summons issued” and attached the same to section 780 rather than to section 781. We must read these sections as we find them. They are mandatory and limiting, in that they prescribe, limit, and fix the manner in which an action may be commenced in the justice’s court.

By the term “must,” as used in section 781, the act of indorsement by the justice of the peace is made mandatory, and the act of issuance of summons can only follow the performance of this required function. No summons can be issued by the justice until “thereafter.” In this instance there being no indorsement upon the complaint setting forth the date upon which it was filed, no summons recognized by our procedure could issue, and the instrument purporting to be a summons in this instance was a nullity. No summons having issued, no action was commenced as prescribed by section 780.

Our practice act prescribes the mode of commencing suits in the justice’s courts and lays the foundation for jurisdiction. A summons to have force and effect must issue by virtue of the provisions of the statute, and when it fails in this it fails in everything. (Dupuy v. Shear, 29 Cal. 238.)

We are referred to the cases of Hook v. Fenner, 18 Colo. 283, 32 Pac. 614, 36 Am. St. Rep. 277, and Hilts v. Hilts, 43 Or. 162, 72 Pac. 697. It is contended that these authorities are of assistance in arriving at a conclusion [326]*326in this matter. These cases, together with many other authorities that might be cited, are expressive of a rule adhered to by a most eminent line, determinative only of the question as to when an instrument is considered as filed. We say a line of authorities, because courts have differed widely in expressing their views as to the question; and even were such authority applicable here, it would be a matter of very careful investigation before we should align ourselves with any of the diversified contentions.

A consideration of the discussions on the question as to when an instrument is actually filed only serves to lead us away from the vital matter in the case at bar.

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170 P. 19, 41 Nev. 321, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lawson-v-dunseath-nev-1918.