Neal-Millard Co. v. Owens

42 S.E. 266, 115 Ga. 959, 1902 Ga. LEXIS 663
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedJuly 19, 1902
StatusPublished
Cited by31 cases

This text of 42 S.E. 266 (Neal-Millard Co. v. Owens) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Neal-Millard Co. v. Owens, 42 S.E. 266, 115 Ga. 959, 1902 Ga. LEXIS 663 (Ga. 1902).

Opinion

Cobb, J.

The Neal-Millard Company filed, in the office of the clerk of the superior court of Chatham county, a petition against Hampton J. Herb and Mrs. Mary H. Owens. The process annexed to the petition stated the case as “Neal-Millard Company vs. Hampton J. Herb and Ed. L. Prince ”; and in the body of the process “the defendants, Hampton J. Herb and Ed. L. Prince,” were required to appear at the next term of the court to answer the plaintiff’s petition. The process was dated August 13, 1901. On the back of the petition the case was stated as the “Neal-Millard Com[960]*960pany vs. Hampton J. Herb and Mrs. Mary H. Owens.” Mrs. Mary H. Owens was duly served personally with a copy of the petition and process; an entry to this effect being made on the petition by the sheriff. On November 30,1901, Mrs. Owens filed in the office of the clerk a petition praying that the court “ pass an order vacating the said entry of service of said copy of the writ upon her by said sheriff.” On Decemher 14, 1901, the plaintiff offered to amend the process by striking out the name of Ed. L. Prince wherever it occurred and inserting in lieu thereof the name of Mrs. Mary H. Owens. Mrs. Owens objected to this amendment; and the court, after hearing argument upon the motion to amend and the motion to vacate the entry of service, took the case under advisement, and on January 16,1902, rendered a judgment disallowing the amendment and sustaining the motion to vacate the entry of service. To this judgment the plaintiff excepted.

The Code provides that “No technical or formal objections shall invalidate any petition or process, but if the same substantially conforms to the requisitions of this Code, and the defendant has had notice of the pendency of the cause, all other objections shall be disregarded.” Civil Code, § 4994. It is also provided that “ The mistake or misprision of a clerk or other ministerial officer shall in no case work to the injury of a party, where by amendment justice may be promoted.” Civil Code, §5125. The Code contains the further provision that “Void process, or where there is no process or waiver thereof, can not be amended, but if service be acknowledged by the defendant, and, upon hearing testimony, the court hecomes satisfied that process was waived by the defendant, and that, at the time such service was acknowledged, by accident or mistake the entry of such waiver was omitted, such omission may he supplied by amendment nunc pro tunc.” Civil Code, § 5109. There is no evidence of a waiver of process by Mrs. Owens; and therefore the question to be determined is, whether the process served upon her was void for the reason that, although she was named in the petition as one of the defendants to the suit, her name did not appear anywhere in the process annexed thereto,but the same contained the names of one of the persons named in the petition as defendants and of another person who had no connection with the case. This is the only question to be determined; for it will be conceded that a void process is not amendable, and that a mere irregularity in a process can be cured by amendment.

[961]*961“Process is the means whereby a court compels, the appearance of a defendant before it or a compliance with its demands.” 20 Enc. P. & P. 1101. To every petition there must be annexed a process, unless the same be waived. Civil Code, § 4974. Where no process is attached to the petition, and process is not waived by the defendant, service of the petition upon him does not give the court jurisdiction to render a judgment against him. In such a case process can not be supplied by amendment at the trial term and service be perfected. Ross v. Jones, 52 Ga. 22; Killen v. Compton, 60 Ga. 117; Scarborough v. Hall, 67 Ga. 576; McGhee v. Mayor, 78 Ga. 790; Lassiter v. Carroll, 87 Ga. 731; Nicholas v. British America Assurance Co., 109 Ga. 621. A void process is equivalent to no process, and the same result would follow from attaching a void process as from a failure to attach any process whatever. Was the process in the present case void, or was the substitution of another name for that of Mrs. Mary H. Owens such a clerical misprision or irregularity as could be cured by amendment ? If in order-to give the court jurisdiction of a proceeding brought against a defendant he must either have been served with a mandate from the court to appear and answer the plaintiff’s demand, or must have waived such mandate, it would seem to follow, as a necessary corollary from this, that the service upon a defendant of a process commanding some one else to appear in court would be no process at all as to the defendant, and he would have a right to utterly disregard the same. When after the service of such a process the sheriff enters a return that the defendant has been served with the petition and process, the fact that he may institute a proceeding to have the entry of service vacated, and by so doing show that he has had notice of the pendency of the suit, ought not to put him in any worse position than if there had been no return of service and he had treated the whole proceeding as a nullity so far as he was concerned. We do not think it is a purely technical or formal objection for a defendant to urge that he has not been served with process requiring him to appear in court; or that a process which commands a person other than the defendant to appear in court can be said to substantially conform to the law relating to process. If this is true, then the mere-fact that the defendant may have had notice of the pendency of the -suit would not authorize the court to enter a judgment against him .in a proceeding which had been instituted without any valid service upon him.

[962]*962It was argued that inasmuch as the process in the present case was valid as to the defendant Hampton. J. Herb, it could not be treated as a void process within the meaning of the statute, and therefore not amendable. This contention is not well founded. There is no reason why a process might not be valid as to one defendant and void as to the other, even though the defendants may have been sued jointly. See, in this connection, Stanford v. Bradford, 45 Ga. 97; Crayton v. Fox, 106 Ga. 853. Several cases were cited by the plaintiff in error, but none of them are controlling upon the point made, and we are not disposed to extend the rulings therein made to a case like the present. While the decision in Cochran v. Davis, 20 Ga. 581, that the decisions made by the Supreme Court as to the want of original process do not apply to a defect in the copy process, might be distinguished upon the idea that that point was really not involved in that case, still the principle of that ruling does not conflict with the decision made in the present case. Here the defect is in the original process and not the copy. In Smith v. Morris, 29 Ga. 339, the process referred merely to “ the defendant,” without stating any name. The court held that the declaration and the process must be taken together, and the name of the defendant being stated in the declaration, the process was not defective merely because it omitted to name the defendant. This decision is not at all in conflict with the present ruling.

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Bluebook (online)
42 S.E. 266, 115 Ga. 959, 1902 Ga. LEXIS 663, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/neal-millard-co-v-owens-ga-1902.