Miller v. Miller

142 P. 218, 37 Nev. 257
CourtNevada Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 15, 1914
DocketNo. 2106
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 142 P. 218 (Miller v. Miller) 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
Miller v. Miller, 142 P. 218, 37 Nev. 257 (Neb. 1914).

Opinions

By the Court,

McCarran, J.:

An order of the district court of the Fourth judicial district was entered setting aside the default of respondent herein, in an action wherein appellant, Alexander McVeigh Miller, was plaintiff, and respondent, Mittie Point Miller, was defendant. A decree of divorce was granted to appellant by the court below, and within six months thereafter the respondent moved to set aside [259]*259the judgment and default entered against her, upon the ground that she had not been served with summons in the action and had no knowledge of its pendency. At the hearing of respondent’s motion to vacate, appellant moved to amend the affidavit of mailing filed by attorney for appellant, upon the ground that a clerical error appeared in the affidavit as to the date of mailing. The trial court after having submitted to it many voluminous affidavits as well as oral evidence, together with the files and records in the case, ordered that the judgment and default be set aside and at the same time denied appellant’s motion to amend the affidavit of mailing. From these orders appeal is taken to this court.

The record in this case as it is before us furnished ample grounds for many observations. We deem it unnecessary to dwell at length upon the acts or conduct of the appellant, notwithstanding the fact that they are at least circumstances tending strongly to confirm the conclusions which we have arrived at.

[1] The fact that appellant has, since the decree of divorce was entered in his favor by the trial court, remarried, constitutes no ground for refusing to set aside the decree, if, from the record and the facts as presented to the trial court, the decree was obtained through fraud or deception perpetrated upon that court and upon the respondent.

It is unnecessary to touch upon many of the facts and circumstances presented by the record. The respondent asserts in her affidavit that she had no notice of the pendency of a divorce action against her, other than one commenced by plaintiff herein in the State of West Virginia. In this assertion she is supported by the affidavit of Mrs. Irene Miller Chainey, daughter of appellant and respondent, and also by the affidavit of Ralph W. Chainey, at whose house she resided.

The order for substituted service contains an indorsement as having been filed November 18, 1910, by Ralph W. Thomas, as deputy clerk, and a further indorsement as follows: "This paper was put into the files by me as clerk [260]*260of this court September 6,1911, at the request of Richard Busteed. , [Signed] Harley A. Harmon, Clerk.”

From this it appears that the order for publication had been withdrawn from the files and was in the possession of appellant’s attorney until September 6, 1911.

The affidavit of Alexander McVeigh Miller for an order directing service of summons by publication sets forth: " That to the best information and belief of deponent said defendant is residing at present either in the city of Boston, Mass., or in Alderson, Greenbrier County, in the State of West Virginia.”

And further states: "That a just cause of action exists herein in favor of plaintiff and against said defendant, as appears by said sworn complaint on file herein. ”

The order for substituted service as made by the presiding judge pursuant to the affidavit is as follows: "On reading and filing the foregoing affidavit and upon the papers herein, it is ordered that service of the summons and complaint herein be made upon the defendant herein by publication, and that the same be published once a week for a period of six weeks in the Las Vegas Age, a newspaper published in Las Vegas, Clark County, Nevada, and that a copy of said summons and a certified copy of said complaint be deposited in the postoffice at Las Vegas, Nevada, postpaid and addressed to said defendant at Boston, Mass., at No. 370 Arbor Row, and to Alderson, Greenbrier County,West Virginia.”

The affidavit of mailing, as made by Richard Busteed, attorney for appellant, sets forth that on the 5th day of February, 1910, ■ he deposited in the postoffice at Las Vegas a true and correct copy of the summons in the action, together with a true and correct copy of the complaint, upon which first-class postage thereon was fully prepaid by him. He further states that the envelope in which these instruments were inclosed was addressed to the respondent, Mittie Point Miller, "at Alderson, West Virginia,” and "at Arbor Way, Forest Hill, Boston, Mass.”

The date of mailing, according to this affidavit, was nine months and twelve days prior to the commencement [261]*261of the suit. Appellant contends that the date of mailing, as set forth in the affidavit of Richard Busteed, is an error and prayed the court below to be permitted to amend the same to conform to the truth. If this were the only error in the proceedings, we might hesitate; but the affidavit of mailing, aside from this error as to the date of mailing,' if such be an error, contains statements vital to the matter at issue.

[2] The order signed by the presiding judge for service of summons by publication and mailing directed that copy of the summons and certified copy of the complaint be deposited in the postoffice at Las Yegas, Nevada, postpaid and addressed to the defendant, Mittie Point Miller, at No. 370 Arbor Row, Boston, Mass., and to Alderson, Greenbrier County, W. Va. The affidavit of mailing, as filed by Attorney Busteed, sets forth: "In the same manner I mailed to the defendant copies of the summons and complaint in this cause, addressed to the defendant at Arbor Way, Forest Hill, Boston, Massachusetts.”

In appellant’s application to amend the affidavit of mailing he seeks only to change the date on which it is alleged the act of mailing took place. Had the court permitted the amendment upon the application of plaintiff, which in our judgment, based upon the entire record in this case, the court was justified in refusing, although amendments should be liberally allowed. This, however, would not cure the vital defect in the affidavit wherein it appears that, if a copy of the summons and complaint was mailed at all, it was mailed to an entirely different address from that directed by the court in its order for substituted service. By the rule as laid down by the court in the case of Victor M. & M. Co. v. Justice Court, 18 Nev. 26, 1 Pac. 831, nothing less than a full compliance with the order for substituted service will suffice to give the trial court jurisdiction.

It appears from the record in this case that Mr. Busteed, attorney for appellant, sought to have the application to amend heard by Judge Somers, while the latter was presiding in Las Vegas at the request of the regular judge, [262]*262and in his argument to Judge Somers, as taken down by the court reporter, it appears that Mr. Busteed stated that the mistake in the date of the affidavit of mailing was made by an inexperienced clerk of the court; but in the affidavit of Attorney Busteed, made in support of the application for permission to amend, he states as follows: "The affiant avers and alleges that the error in the record in this case is due wholly to the inadvertence and possible carelessness, of himself, which was superinduced by the turmoil and excitement of the trial of causes at the term of this court which was then in session.

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Bluebook (online)
142 P. 218, 37 Nev. 257, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/miller-v-miller-nev-1914.