Miner v. Francis

58 N.W. 343, 3 N.D. 549, 1894 N.D. LEXIS 10
CourtNorth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 3, 1894
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 58 N.W. 343 (Miner v. Francis) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering North Dakota Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Miner v. Francis, 58 N.W. 343, 3 N.D. 549, 1894 N.D. LEXIS 10 (N.D. 1894).

Opinion

Corliss, J.

This action was originally commenced before a justice of the peace. The defendants first appeared specially before the justice, and moved to set aside the summons in the action for the reason that no time was therein specified for the appearance of the defendants. This motion was overruled. Defendants excepted. Thereafter, they answered the complaint in the action; reserving, however, their objection to the jurisdiction of the court because of the alleged insufficiency of the summons. Judgment having been rendered against them, they appealed to the District Court on questions of law only. No new trial was demanded or had. Being defeated in that court, the defendants have brought the case here for review on the single question of jurisdiction.

We think that the justice should have sustained defendants’ motion to dismiss because of the defect in the summons heretofore mentioned. The summons did not, on its face, specify any definite return day. It required the defendants to appear before the justice on the seventh day after the service of the summons upon them, exclusive of the day of service. The summons must [551]*551contain “a direction that the defendant appear and answer before the justice at his office at the time specified in the summons.” Comp. Laws, § 6053. The time was not specified in the summons. It was 'only by reference to an extrinsic fact that the return day could be ascertained. The statute provides that the summons itself shall specify the return day. That day must be fixed by the summons, and appear upon its face, without reference to a future, uncertain event. The day for the appearance of the defendants in this case could not be determined by an inspection of the process. It was fixed, not by the summons alone, but by the volition of the officer having the process to serve. Until it should please him to serve it, it could have no fixed return day. Should he serve it on such a day that the return day would fall oh Sunday or a legal holiday, the summons, which it is claimed is valid when issued, would become illegal by the act of a ministerial officer. This would not result from the fact that it was served on a day on which process could not be legally served, but because the ministerial officer had fixed the return day on Sunday or a legal holiday. Counsel for respondent urges that the summons is as valid as it would be if it contained a statement that it was returnable in seven days after date. But the analogy fails in a vital particular. Such a summons, unlike the one in the case at bar, would, upon its face, and by reference to its language alone, fix the return Bay without the necessity of a resort to extrinsic evidence. What would be the return day of a summons like that issued in this case, where it was served on two defendants on different days? As to the two defendants, it would be returnable on different days. One must appear on one day, and one on another day.

^ But it is insisted that defendants, by their general appearance after their objection to the summons had been overruled, and by pleading to the merits, made a voluntary appearance; that such an appearance conferred jurisdiction; and that, as the only objection here made relates to the jurisdiction of the court, it is immaterial whether the court erred in deciding that it had jurisdiction, [552]*552for, even assuming all its proceedings to have been illegal before the voluntary appearance, from that time it was vested by the defendants’ voluntary action with full jurisdiction over their persons. If the subsequent general appearance can be regarded as voluntary, the respondent’s position cannot be successfully assailed. But we do not think it was voluntary. It was not like an appearance under threat of a justice to take jurisdiction without color of authority. In such a case, the defendant, being in no danger of prejudice from refusing to appear, could hardly be said to have been forced to make an appearance to protect himself. Such an appearance would be voluntary. But here there was a summons, although it was defective, and here there was a legal service of this summons. The court having overruled defendants’ motion, the defendants were compelled by the joint action of the justice and the plaintiff — by the action of, the justice in overruling Jthe motion, and the action of plaintiff in persisting in his suit ‘ (after he had been apprised of the defect in the summons — to\ defend, or take the risk of being defeated on the question of jurisdiction after it was too late to be heard on the merits. Some of the courts which hold an appearance under such circumstances ' to be voluntary deem it unfair that the defendant should have the chance of. defeating a judgment .on the merits by sustaining the jurisdictional point on appeal, while he enjoys the certainty of sustaining the judgment, if favbrable to himself. But it often happens that, upon the trial of an action, reversible error is committed by the court while plaintiff is proving his case. Must the defendant then be regarded as waiving such error because he proceeds, with the chance of reversal if defeated? It is well to put the responsibility for this condition where it belongs. That the defendant enjoys this advantage is owing to the action of the plaintiff, in persisting in his prosecution of the case after he has been faii'ly warned by the defendant that he will, at all stages of the action, insist upon his contention that the court had no light to take jurisdiction of his pereon. Let the plaintiff, dismiss, and start anew, if he is unwilling that defendant should enjoy this [553]*553advantage. We are aware that there are a number of cases in which the contrary view is adopted; but we feel that the rule which we establish in this case is more in accord^with principia, and rnore.equitableJrLits spirit, having in view — the interests and rights of both plaint.iffi--an-d — d-efendarit in the action. We hold that a general appearance after an objection to jurisdiction has been overruled, does not constitute a voluntary appearance, unless the contrary is shown, provided the defendant seeks a review of his objection to the jurisdiction of the-court in the very action in which it is made. Of course, it is clear that a defendant may make a voluntary appearance after such an objection is overruled. That it was his purpose to make such an appearance would be conclusively established by his abandoning the point after judgment, by not seeking to review it on appeal. Hence, such a judgment would never be vulnerable to collateral attack on the ground that the appearance was not voluntary. There is an intimation to the contrary in Jones v. Jones, (N. Y. App.) 15 N. E. 707-709, but what was said was only obiter. As sustaining our ruling that the subsequent general appearance was not voluntary, and that, therefore, the judgments of the District Court and of the justice of the peace should be reversed, and the case dismissed, on the ground that the justice never acquired jurisdiction over the persons of the defendants, because there was neither service of legal process nor a voluntary appearance, we cite the following cases: Harkness v. Hyde, 98 U. S. 476; Warren v. Crane, 50 Mich. 301, 15 N. W. 465; Dewey v. Greene, 4 Denio, 94; Walling v. Beers, 120 Mass. 548; Jones v. Jones, (N. Y. App.) 15 N. E. 707; Benedict v. Johnson, (S. D.) 57 N.W. 66; Avery v. Slack, 17 Wend. 85; Deidesheimer v. Brown, 8 Cal. 339; Kent v. West, 50 Cal. 185; Lyman v. Milton, 44 Cal.

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Bluebook (online)
58 N.W. 343, 3 N.D. 549, 1894 N.D. LEXIS 10, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/miner-v-francis-nd-1894.