Moynahan v. Wilson

17 F. Cas. 948, 2 Flip. 130
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Eastern Michigan
DecidedDecember 15, 1877
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 17 F. Cas. 948 (Moynahan v. Wilson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Eastern Michigan primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Moynahan v. Wilson, 17 F. Cas. 948, 2 Flip. 130 (circtedmi 1877).

Opinion

BROWN, District Judge.

Most of the statements contained in the affidavits read upon this motion relate to the merits of the controversy, and, therefore, have no bearing here. It appears that the plaintiff and one Demass, when in Indianapolis, made a bargain with one Gosnell, the then owner of the mare, to bring her here with the intention of matching her against a horse known as “Tom Hendricks” and that five hundred dollars were deposited in Gosnell’s hands, either as security for the safe return of the mare, or as a personal loan from the plaintiff. Gosnell claims that the agreement was to be can-celled if, in the mean time, he could sell the mare, and that he did sell her to Wilson with the consent of all parties, the money being returned to Demass. O11 the other-hand, it is claimed by the plaintiff that he was to have the use of her for a year, to race her as he liked, and to divide the profits with Gosnell; that he knew nothing of the sale to Wilson, and that Demass received back the ,$500 after plaintiff had left Indianapolis, and without authority from him. All this is immaterial to the present controversy; so likewise are the affidavits with respect to the value of the mare, and to the propriety of driving her in harness. I am satisfied she is worth more than five hundred dollars, and consequently that the court has jurisdiction.

On Demass returning to Detroit, plaintiff, finding his agreement had fallen through, and that the mare had been sold to Wilson, the defendant, and had passed into his possession, wrote defendant the following ' letter: “I am very sorry that you took ‘Bay Sallie’ away from Demass, as I have made a match against Hendricks to pace next week for five hundred dollars a side; the money is up, and as John (Demass) says you would bring the mare if matched, please ship her at once to Detroit, as there will be a great betting race. Don’t fail to send her; if you don’t send her, I lose the money that is now up, so don’t fail.” To Gosnell he wrote a similar letter-adding, “Write or telegraph me when she will be here, as we have not fixed the day to pace until I hear from you.” Supposing that statement to be true, defendant at once shipped the mare to Detroit in charge of an hostler, and on arriving here, plaintiff took possession of her, paid for her transportation and sent her to a stable; he then took the advice of counsel and, acting upon such advice, re[949]*949turned her nominally to the possession of defendant, who soon after arrived here himself, then demanded her of him, and upon defendant refusing to deliver her up, took out this writ of replevin. It appears from the affidavit of Mr. Greusel, owner of the “Tom Hendricks,” that his horse had not heen matched against the mare at all, nor had he made any agreement with the plaintiff, to pace with the “Bay Sallie,” nor had he nor any one for him, to his knowledge, put up any money for such a race. Indeed, Moyna-han admits that the only foundation for his letter was, that he had some talk with the owner of “Tom Hendricks” about making a match if he could get his friends to put in with him, and stated that he would see plaintiff again, and that before seeing Greusel again he wrote the letters in question, although he says he had been informed by friends of Greusel there would be no trouble in making a match for five hundred dollars, and “deponent believes that such was the fact, and now expects that he will have no difficulty in making the match.” In short, the letters Were false from beginning to end, j and were evidently intended as a device to get the horse to Detroit. I am satisfied, too, that the subsequent surrender to defendant was solely for the purpose of anticipating a writ of replevin from him, and getting her into his own possession under the writ in this case. ;

It is perfectly well settled that where a defendant is brought within the process of the court by a trick or device of this kind the service wfll be set aside and he will be discharged from custody. Union Sugar Refinery v. Mathiessen [Case No. 14,397]; Wells v. Gurney, 8 Barn. & C. 769; Snelling v. Watrous, 2 Paige, 315; Williams v. Bacon, 10 Wend. 636; Metcalf v. Clark, 41 Barb. 45; Stein v. Valkenhuysen, El., Bl. & El. 65; Williams v. Reed, 5 Dutch. [29 N. J. Law] 385; Carpenter v. Spooner, 2 Sandf. 717; Pfiffner v. Krapfel, 28 Iowa, 27.

Though these were all actions in personam where the defendant was himself discharged, I see no reason why the same principle will not apply to a case of replevin where property is fraudulently decoyed within the jurisdiction of the court.

A serious question, however, remains to be considered: Plaintiff insists that filing the petition for removal in the state court was an appearance, and a waiver of any defect in the service of the writ. That the filing of a petition for a removal is an appearance within the meaning of the judiciary act of 1789 [1 Stat. 73], requiring the petition to be filed “at the time of entering his appearance in the state court” was decided, I think correctly, in Sweeny v. Coffin [Case No. 13,686]. A like ruling was made by a majority of the court in the case of Chatham Nat. Bank v. Merchants’ Nat. Bank, 1 Hun, 702.

While I have little doubt that filing this petition is a sufficient appearance to answer the requirements of the judiciary act, my impression is it cannot be considered as a general appearance in the cause. An appearance has been defined to be a submission to the authority of the court in the case, whether coerced or voluntary, or an act importing that the defendant submits the determination of a material question in his case to the judgment of the court. Cooley v. Lawrence, 5 Duer, 610.

It has frequently been held that a motion to dismiss a case for want of jurisdiction is not an appearance, the very act of making the motion implying that the party does not submit himself to the authority of the court. Sullivan v. Frazee, 4 Rob. [N. Y.] 616; Decker v. New York Belting & Packing Co. [Case No. 3,727]; Commercial Bank v. Slocum, 14 Pet. [39 U. S.] 60; Ulmer v. Hiatt, 4 G. Greene, 439, 440. And I am strongly inclined to think that filing a petition in the state court, which, according to the better authority, requires no action on the part of that court, and deprives it instantly of its jurisdiction of the case, cannot be considered a general appearance in the cause.

But whether this be so or not, I am satis- ; fled that the petition for removal should not be construed as a -waiver of a fraud in procuring the service of the writ. While it is true that a general appearance is a waiver of irregularity in the writ or its service, none of the authorities go to the extent here claimed. In 3 Chit. Gen. Prac. 522-525, an important and suggestive distinction is taken between mere irregularities ,and such defects as render the proceedings a total nullity and altogether void; for although an irregularity may be waived, if not objected to within a reasonable time, it has been considered to be a general rule that a nullity or essential defect may be taken advantage of at any subsequent stage of the action. In Taylor v. Phillips, 3 East, 155, it was held “that service of process on Sunday was absolutely void by statute and could not be made good by any subsequent waiver of the defendant by his not objecting until after a rule to plead given.” And to the same effect is Morgan v. Johnson. 1 H. Bl. 628. A large number of other cases are cited in Chitty, which apparently proceed upon the same ground. While I think the American courts would not go so far in holding that material defects could not be waived, the distinction between irregularities and nullities is noticed and approved in several American cases. In U. S. v.

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17 F. Cas. 948, 2 Flip. 130, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/moynahan-v-wilson-circtedmi-1877.