Morris v. Baltimore & O. Ry.

32 Ohio C.C. Dec. 662, 18 Ohio C.C. (n.s.) 167
CourtSummit Circuit Court
DecidedApril 12, 1911
StatusPublished

This text of 32 Ohio C.C. Dec. 662 (Morris v. Baltimore & O. Ry.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Summit Circuit Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Morris v. Baltimore & O. Ry., 32 Ohio C.C. Dec. 662, 18 Ohio C.C. (n.s.) 167 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1911).

Opinion

MARVIN, J.

This case is before ns on a motion to set aside the service of summons issued on the petition in error.

The ground of the motion is that the summons is not in conformity with the provisions of the statute providing for such-summons.

Section 12259 G. C., so far as it need here be considered, after providing for the filing of a petition in error reads':

“Thereupon a summons shall issue and be served, or publication made as in the commencement of an action. * * * The summons shall state that a petition in error has been filed in the case. If issued in vacation, it shall be returnable on or before the first day of the term, of court; if issued in term time, on a day therein named. ’ ’

The summons in this case was issued on November 18, 1910, which was a day in the October term of this circuit court. The summons was made returnable on the first day of the next term of said circuit court. The return of the sheriff on the summons shows that it was served upon the attorney of record of the [663]*663defendant in error on November 22, 1910. It will be noticed that tbe return day in- the summons was made as though the summons .had been issued in vacation. It will be further noticed by reading the summons that the order as to its return is directed to the sheriff. It is he to whom these words in - the summons are addressed: “You will make due return of this summons on or before the first day of the next term of said circuit court. ’ ’ It was suggested on the argument that possibly there might be an amendment ordered with reference to this summons, and counsel for the plaintiff in error, following such suggestion, has filed a motion asking for an amendment to the summons and suggesting that the return day be made December 1,1910. It seems clear that no amendment can now be made to this summons which will cure any defect therein. Amendments are allowed in proceedings in court, and- especially upon a return made on a summons and other writs, to conform to the facts, but here, if an amendment were made, as suggested in the motion, or any amendment which should fix a day certain for the return of this summons, we should have the curious situation of having by an order of court falsified the return of the sheriff. For the sheriff says in his return that he “served the same by handing a true and attested copy thereof with the endorsements, thereon,” etc. If the summons is changed to read, as suggested, this return of the sheriff would not be true, because we should have then to fix a summons, a true copy of which he did not serve on anybody. It seems clear, therefore, that no amendment can help out any defect in this summons. And this brings us to the question whether there is a fatal defect in the summons, so as to render it void. We have reached the conclusion that there is no such fatal defect. The purpose of the summons is to notify the defendant in error that proceedings have been commenced, seeking a reversal of the judgment of the" court below. That is the only purpose of the summons. That notice was received by the defendant in error and received at a time sufficiently long before the opening of the next term of court to give him all the time for preparation which could reasonably be necessary.

It is suggested on the part of the defendant in error, that [664]*664when the statute provides that a summons issued in term time shall be made returnable on a day certain, it necessarily means a day within the term. This is clearly not tenable, because neither the clerk nor the attorney who files the precipe for the issuing of the summons can know when the term will close. He does know, however, whether or not the summons is being issued during the term of court, and clearly the intention of the statute was to have a day certain fixed and that if that day certain should turn out to be a day within the term, the case might be ready for hearing at that time, and if that day certain should turn out to be a day after the adjournment of the term, the case would not stand for hearing until the next term, but in no event would the day for hearing be later than the next succeeding term, unless it should be that the day certain is later than the beginning of the next term.

Counsel for defendant in error call attention to 20 Encyclopedia of Pleading and Practice, 1159, and to cases cited, under paragraph C, note 4, on that page. The language of the text in the citation referred to reads:

“All writs must be returnable, as provided by law, and the return day can not be extended beyond that fixed by the statute for the purpose. A writ not returnable, as provided by law, as where a less number of days intervene between its teste and the return day than the statute requires, is fatally defective.”

Many of the eases cited have been examined and in several of them it appears that the summons being considered was a summons issued by a justice of the peace in which the party is notified in the summons of when his case will be for trial; and in the other cases it is where a summons is issued upon a petition filed in a nisi prius court, where the summons indicates to the party when he will be required to answer to the petition. The summons in these cases are clearly distinguishable from the summons required to be issued by our statute in proceedings in error. No time is fixed either by the summons or by the statute for an answer to be filed. No answer is required. The defendant is Simply notified that a petition has been filed, and by examining the summons he knows when the sheriff is required to make return of the writ, and thereby he knows when the case will be ready for hearing in court.

[665]*665The Supreme Court of Wisconsin, in the case of Porter v. Vandercook, 11 Wis. 70, had this situation before it. An action was commenced in June, 1859. Summons required the appellant to answer within twenty days, whereas the statute provided that the answer should be filed within ninety days from the service of summons, and the court said in the syllabus:

‘1 Though the better practice would be to state the true time prescribed by law for the defendant to answer the plaintiff, yet it is not error to state that the answer must be made in twenty days. ’ ’

In the opinion at page 71, it is said:

“Perhaps, the better practice is to specify in the summons the true time as prescribed by law for the defendants to answer the plaintiff. Still, this court held, in the case of Lawrence v. Brown, decided at the January term, 1859, not reported, that the phraseology of the summons in this particular was not material; that the defendant must be presumed to know the law and the time which it gave him to answer; and that therefore a summons should not be set aside even though it did not conform to the law in that respect, and require the defendant to answer according.
‘ ‘ This was the extent of the decision in that case and upon so unimportant a question of practice, must be considered decisive as to the objection taken to the summons in the present case. The appellants undoubtedly well knew that the law gave them ninety days to answer the plaintiff and were not misled by anything which the summons contained.”

In the ease of Guion v. Melvin, 69 N. C. 242, it is said in the syllabus:

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Related

Guion and Wife v. . Melvin .
69 N.C. 242 (Supreme Court of North Carolina, 1873)
Porter v. Vandercook
11 Wis. 70 (Wisconsin Supreme Court, 1860)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
32 Ohio C.C. Dec. 662, 18 Ohio C.C. (n.s.) 167, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/morris-v-baltimore-o-ry-ohcirctsummit-1911.