MacDermid v. MacDermid

73 A.2d 315, 116 Vt. 237
CourtSupreme Court of Vermont
DecidedMay 2, 1950
Docket1766
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 73 A.2d 315 (MacDermid v. MacDermid) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Vermont primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
MacDermid v. MacDermid, 73 A.2d 315, 116 Vt. 237 (Vt. 1950).

Opinion

73 A.2d 315 (1950)

MacDERMID
v.
MacDERMID.

No. 1766.

Supreme Court of Vermont.

May 2, 1950.

*316 Sterry R. Waterman, St. Johnsbury, for petitioner.

Robert H. Ryan, Montpelier, Hunt & Hunt, Montpelier, for defendant.

Before SHERBURNE, C. J., and JEFFORDS, CLEARY, ADAMS and BLACKMER, JJ.

JEFFORDS, Justice.

In March, 1947, the plaintiff brought a petition for support under the statute, V.S. 1947, § 3256. In July of that year, after a hearing, an order was made by the court which provided, inter alia, that certain personal property be delivered forthwith by the defendant to the plaintiff. The order expressly provided that the parties are to be dealt with for contempt upon their failure to comply with any of its provisions.

In June, 1949, the plaintiff brought a petition for contempt to enforce the order, alleging that it had not been complied with and, in effect, praying that the defendant be required to show cause why he should not be dealt with in contempt for his failure to obey the order. We are concerned only with the latter petition.

On July 1, 1949, the defendant filed a plea to the jurisdiction of the court over his person. This plea was signed by the defendant personally in Waterbury, Connecticut. Its grounds are that the petition was never served personally on him in Vermont; that he has no place of abode in this state; that there was no valid service on him in this jurisdiction; that there are not herein any goods, chattels, etc., belonging to him; that he has never accepted service of the petition.

A hearing was had on the plea. Findings of fact were made and the plea was overruled. The case was passed to this Court before final judgment for determination of the exceptions of the defendant.

The findings as far as here material are as follows: The petition is dated June 6, 1949. The officer serving it was directed to summon the defendant to appear before the court, in which the petition for support is pending, on June 20, 1949, by serving a copy of the contempt petition on T. T. Lawson of Barre, as attorney of record in that court for the defendant in the original petition. The service was to be made on or before June 10th. The officer's return *317 shows that it was so served on that day. The petition for support is now pending in court and has been on its active docket since its inception. Lawson represented the defendant in the hearing in 1947, and his name has remained on the active docket of the court. The only service of the petition for contempt was on Lawson. The original order of 1947 was served on the defendant personally in Montpelier by a duly qualified officer on the day that it was made.

The defendant was never personally served with a copy of the contempt petition in this state or elsewhere. He has, and at all material times has had, no place of abode in this state nor has he had here at such times any goods, chattels, etc., belonging to him. He has never accepted service of the petition.

Lawson was fully paid for all services rendered the defendant within a short time after representing him in court in 1947. After the service of the original order on the defendant in 1947, Lawson never notified the attorney for the plaintiff, the county court, or the clerk of that court, that he desired to be permitted to withdraw from the case, or that he was no longer employed by the defendant.

The defendant made several requests for findings which were not granted and his exceptions to these refusals are first to be here considered. These requests need not be stated in full. All of them were to the effect that Lawson had not represented the defendant since he was paid in 1947; that he performed no legal services for the defendant since that time; that at the time of the service of the petition for contempt he was not representing or acting as attorney for the defendant; that Lawson forwarded the papers in the contempt matter to another attorney at the time; that prior to the service of the contempt petition on him Lawson had agreed with one of the attorneys for the defendant that his (Lawson's) name be struck as counsel of record for the defendant in the matter of the petition for support. In short, all of these requests were for findings to the effect that at the time of the service of the contempt petition on Lawson he was not representing the defendant as the latter's attorney in the petition for support.

The essence of the defendant's claim of error in the court's refusal to grant his requests is that they are warranted by the evidence and would show that at the time of the service of the contempt petition on Lawson, and for a considerable time prior thereto, he was in fact no longer representing the defendant in the matter of the original petition. We grant that the evidence warranted the requested findings and that they would show the fact to be as claimed by the defendant.

This fact is to be inferred from certain of the findings above recited and from others which we have not set forth. But these requested findings and those which we have omitted were not material to the determination of any issue in the case. Thus error in refusing to make the findings was harmless. Houghton v. Grimes, 103 Vt. 54, 65, 151 A. 642.

The findings show that Lawson never notified the attorney for the plaintiff, the court, or the clerk of the court, that he desired to withdraw from the original case or that he was no longer employed by the defendant to represent him therein. Consequently at the time of the service of the contempt petition, the plaintiff had the right to consider Lawson as the attorney authorized by the defendant to represent him in the original matter, though as between Lawson and the defendant this authority did not exist in fact. In re Petition of Jacobs, 116 Vt. 11, 68 A.2d 710.

In re O'Brien, 93 Vt. 194, 205, 107 A. 487; Tripp v. Santa Rosa Street R. R. Co., 144 U.S. 126, 12 S.Ct. 655, 36 L.Ed. 371; 7 C.J.S., Attorney and Client, § 110, page 944. See also County Court Rule I.

This being so, the question is whether the service on Lawson was sufficient to give the court jurisdiction of the person of the defendant.

The statute relating to the service of process in cases such as the one here is V.S. 1947, § 1397, which reads as follows: "Contempt. When a party violates an order *318 made against him in a cause brought to or pending before a superior judge the county court or the court of chancery after service of such order upon such party, contempt proceedings may be instituted against him before such court or any superior judge. When, in a cause no longer on the docket of the court, such proceedings are brought before a superior judge, such judge shall order forthwith such cause to be brought forward on the docket of the court and may issue concurrently with such order a summons or capias against such party. The issuing of such summons or capias and any further proceedings thereon shall be minuted on such docket."

The case at hand is one for civil contempt. In re Sage, 115 Vt. 516, 66 A.2d 13. The distinction between proceedings to punish criminal contempts and those for contempts to enforce civil remedies is well defined in Pitt v. Davison, 37 N.Y. 235. It is there shown why personal service must be had on the defendant in the former but not in the latter proceedings.

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Bluebook (online)
73 A.2d 315, 116 Vt. 237, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/macdermid-v-macdermid-vt-1950.