Love v. Moore

1902 OK 40, 69 P. 871, 11 Okla. 645, 1902 Okla. LEXIS 31
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedJuly 17, 1902
StatusPublished

This text of 1902 OK 40 (Love v. Moore) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Love v. Moore, 1902 OK 40, 69 P. 871, 11 Okla. 645, 1902 Okla. LEXIS 31 (Okla. 1902).

Opinion

Opinion of the’ court by

Pancoast, J.:

It is contended by the plaintiff in error, that the proceedings of the justice of the peace who rendered the original judgment were so irregular that the judgment tendered is void and a nullity; that no presumptions in favor of the regularity of the proceedings of a justice court ¡>m indulged in; and that all the facts necessary to show the jurisdiction of an inferior court must appear from the record; and, finally, that the justice’s docket failing to show affirmatively the hour at which the defendants failed to appear and were *647 adjudged in default, and this being a jurisdictional defect, the judgment rendered against him is void.

Several cases are cited in support of the contention of the plaintiff in error in this case, among which may be noted the case of Mudge v. Yaples, 25 N. W. 297, a Michigan ease, the decision in which seems to rest upon the former case of Vroman v. Thompson, 16 N. W. 808. This is the leading case, to which all other cases refer that follow the rule laid down here. A careful examination of these cases shows the fact to be that in the state of Michigan there is a statutory provision which specifically requires the time of the appearance of the parties to be entered upon the justice’s docket, and the learned court, following that statutory provision, necessarily held that where the defendant failed to appear it was necessary for the justice of the peace to note the hour at which the plaintiff appeared and the trial was had. This case is followed in the case of Post v. Harper, 28 N. W. 161.

The case of Miller v. Plue, from Nebraska, 64 N. W. 232, is cited as following and sustaining the Michigan cases, but a careful examination of this case does not uphold this contention, for in the Nebraska case it was shown that:

“The docket of the justice fails to disclose the day and hour specified in the summons for the appearance of the defendant, nor does it appear that service of the writ was ever had upon him. Nor, if made, that it was served at least three days before the time set for trial, as required by statute. It is shown that Miller never appeared before the justice. Therefore it was necessary for the docket to show affirmatively that jurisdiction was acquired over his person by the service of process upon him within the time and in the mode prescribed by statute. In other words, it was indispensable that the docket, by a reasonable intendment, disclose that the justice had jurisdiction of the person of the defendant. While it is true that *648 the docket entry shows that the plaintiff appeared, the trial was had, and judgment was rendered on the 2nd day of May, 1891, yet it is not shown that that was the day fixed for the return of the summons. Nor does the docket state at what hour the plaintiff appeared and the case was called for trial.”

So it is plainly seen that this case did not rest alone upon the defect that the docket did not show the hour at which the trial was had; and while the court farther on, refers to the Michigan cases as supporting its decision, yet it is evident that the decision does not rest upon this one proposition.

The case of State ex rel Kenyon v. Laurandeau, (Montana,) 53 Pac. 536, is also relied upon as supporting the contention of the plaintiff in error. While the court seemingly cites the Michigan cases with approval, yet the case under consideration there is not the case here at all. In that case it was shown affirmative^ by the justice’s docket that the plaintiff did not appear at the time set for the trial or at the time the trial was had; that the defendants did appear, but made no answer, and that the justice, notwithstanding the failure of the plaintiff to appear, rendered judgment in the case. In the decision of the case the Montana court holds, quoting from Redman v. White, 25 Mich. 523.

“The failure of the plaintiff to appear within one hour after process is returnable works a discontinuance, and, of course, excludes all authority in the justice to give judgment for him. Now, if the proof afforded by the docket was so defective as not to show that the plaintiff appeared on any particular day out of several, it certainly did not show that he appeared within the time prescribed, to authorize the justice to render judgment for him. It therefore fails to show affirmatively, as is necessary, that the justice was possessed of authority to give the judgment in question, and was properly excluded.”

*649 This case therefore caimot be held to be in point in the case at bar, nor can any of the cases referred .to be held to be authority here, as the first two were based upon a statutory provision and the others upon a different state of facts. These are about the only cases which hold along the line indicated, and require such strict nicety of form and expression on the part of justices of the peace; while on the other hand, numerous courts, whose decisions are entitled to the same respect, deal much more liberally with the records of justices of the peace in matters of this character.

In the case of Bacon v. Bassett, 19 Wis. 54, the court had this identical question before it, and it was there contended that the justice’s docket should show affirmatively at what hour the case was called and the judgment rendered; that it should show that he held his court in some town in the county; and that the summons was served in that county; otherwise, that it did not show facts sufficient to give him jurisdiction. The court, in passing upon that case, held that the statute did not require the justice to enter in his docket that he held his court at the time and place appointed in the summons; that the presumpion was that he did so until the contrary was shown; nor did it require the justice to enter on the docket at what hour the suit was called or the judgment rendered, the presumption being that the suit was called within one hour after the time specified in the summons, and judgment rendered after the expiration of such hour.

From the language used by the justice in this case is it necessary to presume anything in order to fairly show that the justice tried the case at the hour to which the same had been continued? It is true that the hour is not noted specifically, but is not the language “ease called, plaintiff appeared, defendants appeared not, and after waiting one hour were declared to *650 be in default” equivalent to tbe statement tbat the plaintiff appeared at the hour of 1:30 p.

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Related

County Board of Supervisors v. Jones
19 Wis. 51 (Wisconsin Supreme Court, 1865)
Driscoll v. Smith
17 N.W. 876 (Wisconsin Supreme Court, 1883)
Redman v. White
25 Mich. 523 (Michigan Supreme Court, 1872)
State ex rel. Kenyon v. Laurandeau
53 P. 536 (Montana Supreme Court, 1898)
Muller v. Plue
64 N.W. 232 (Nebraska Supreme Court, 1895)
Vroman v. Thompson
16 N.W. 808 (Michigan Supreme Court, 1883)
Mudge v. Yaples
25 N.W. 297 (Michigan Supreme Court, 1885)
Post v. Harper
28 N.W. 161 (Michigan Supreme Court, 1886)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1902 OK 40, 69 P. 871, 11 Okla. 645, 1902 Okla. LEXIS 31, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/love-v-moore-okla-1902.