Murtha v. Olson

21 N.W.2d 607, 221 Minn. 240, 1946 Minn. LEXIS 458
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedFebruary 8, 1946
DocketNo. 34,121.
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 21 N.W.2d 607 (Murtha v. Olson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Murtha v. Olson, 21 N.W.2d 607, 221 Minn. 240, 1946 Minn. LEXIS 458 (Mich. 1946).

Opinion

Thomas Gallagher, Justice.

This is an appeal from an order denying defendant’s motion to vacate a default judgment against him entered on February 14, *241 1945, on the ground that service of summons in the action was never made upon him. The action was for cancellation of a farm lease on certain land in Martin county wherein plaintiff was the lessor and defendant the lessee. The judgment referred to gave plaintiff the relief sought.

At the hearing on the motion, affidavits and oral testimony were presented. The sheriff’s return of service certified that on January 20, 1945, he served the summons and complaint on defendant by leaving copies thereof at defendant’s last usual place of abode with one Reinhold Zutz, a person of suitable age and discretion then resident therein.

The affidavits and oral testimony indicated that Reinhold Zutz was then the owner of and resident upon a farm in Faribault county. His son J ohn resided with, him there and also owned a farm about a mile away. On the son’s farm there were buildings, but no one resided therein.

Defendant’s affidavit affirmed that defendant was not served with summons or process; that copies of the summons and complaint were left at the residence of Reinhold Zutz, on January 24, 1945, but that defendant on that date was not a resident therein nor of said county; that he was then a resident of Freeborn county and not present at the Zutz home at the time service was made; that he had stopped at said Zutz home only once or twice in passing through said county. He testified that he was unmarried and traveled about substantially during the winter months buying and selling horses; that he owned farm equipment and that during the month of January 1945 such equipment was on a farm he had rented in Freeborn county; that he had remained on said farm during the farming season, but that during the winter he was away from it quite frequently; that during the winter he had horses scattered throughout the county on different farms, including the farm he rented; that the farm equipment had remained upon the Freeborn county farm until the last week of February 1945, when he removed it to the Becker farm near Elmore; that he had never stayed at the Zutz, Sr., farm, but had slept at the son’s *242 farm one night during threshing season when he worked there; that he had registered for the draft at Blue Earth in Faribault county; that his father and mother lived at Fairmont; and that he did not receive the summons and complaint from Zutz, Jr., until the last full week of February 1945.

John Zutz testified that he lived upon his father’s farm; that he knew defendant, who on occasions had helped him thresh; that on January 20, 1945, defendant had visited at the home of Zutz, Sr., and left his car on the road in front thereof; that on that date he and defendant went to Albert Lea and returned that night, but that defendant did not stay at said home that evening or the next day; that at one time defendant had left some horses on his farm; that defendant never slept at his house or his father’s house, to his knowledge; that at one time he had advised defendant that he might sleep in one of the buildings on his farm and that he was of the belief that defendant had stayed there for one night some time prior to January 20, 1945; that he . had given copies of the summons and complaint to defendant some three or four weeks after they were left at his father’s house. No testimony was submitted on the part of Zutz, Sr., or his daughter, who resided with him, both declining to participate in the proceedings and neither of the parties undertaking to subpoena them.

In opposition to the foregoing, plaintiff presented affidavits of the sheriff and of Burton and Tressa Butler, as well as oral testimony by the sheriff. In substance, the sheriff’s affidavits and testimony affirmed that he had served defendant on January 20, 1945, by leaving copies of the summons and complaint with Zutz, Sr., at his farm; that at that time he was advised by Zutz, Sr., that defendant had been there but left that morning for Albert Lea with Zutz, Jr., and was in the habit of coming to his farm and staying for several days at a time and would be back there that evening; that at that time he had observed defendant’s car parked in front of the house with his clothes and suitcase therein and his driver’s license attached to the steering wheel. In one affidavit he stated that shortly prior to January 20, 1945, defendant had brought an *243 action of replevin to recover a certain horse which defendant claimed had been unlawfully taken from him on the Zutz, Sr., farm. In the other affidavit he stated that on April 25, 1945, after the entry of judgment, he had talked with Zutz, Sr., on the latter’s farm and had been advised by him then that Zutz, Jr., had delivered the summons and complaint to defendant on January 21, 1945, in the presence of Zutz, Sr., and that during the winter of 1944-1945 defendant had stayed and worked' on the Zutz, Sr., farm.

Burton Butler, a prospective tenant for plaintiff’s land if the cancellation action here was successful, in his affidavit set forth that at the request of plaintiff’s counsel he had delivered the summons and complaint to the sheriff for service upon defendant and had observed the sheriff proceeding toward the Zutz farm on January 20, 1945, presumably to make such service; that on January 22, 1945, he had talked with defendant at his (Butler’s) home and at that time had been advised by defendant that “the papers had been served by plaintiff”; that he then had some further conversation with defendant concerning payment for certain plowing which defendant had done upon the land involved in the action. Tressa Butler affirmed that she had overheard the conversation between her husband and defendant and had heard defendant state that “papers had been served upon him by the sheriff of Faribault county and that plaintiff was going to cancel the lease he had with defendant.”

The foregoing summarizes all the evidence submitted on the question of defendant’s domicile. Based thereon, the trial court denied defendant’s motion to set aside the service of process and vacate the judgment, holding that the sheriff’s certificate of service had not been overcome by the clear and convincing evidence required, and, in particular, referring to the uncontroverted affidavits of Mr. and Mrs. Butler as sufficient to sustain his conclusion.

The rule applicable here is set forth in Kueffner v. Gottfried, 154 Minn. 70, 72, 191 N. W. 271, 272, where this court stated:

“* * * The question was one of fact, and, in reviewing the court’s decision, we are governed by the familiar rule that there *244 should not be a reversal if the statements in conflicting affidavits might lead different minds to opposite conclusions as to the fact in question. * * * The foundation for the rule is less substantial where all the evidence is documentary than where it comes from witnesses whom the court sees and hears. * * *
“Upon the issue presented, the sheriff’s return was strong evidence in plaintiffs’ favor. To overcome its effect as prima facie evidence, the proofs must be ‘clear and satisfactory,’ [citing cases]. Of course all the statements in the return were not entitled to the same weight.

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Bluebook (online)
21 N.W.2d 607, 221 Minn. 240, 1946 Minn. LEXIS 458, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/murtha-v-olson-minn-1946.