North Laramie Land Co. v. Hoffman

195 P. 988, 27 Wyo. 271, 1921 Wyo. LEXIS 14
CourtWyoming Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 10, 1921
DocketNo. 967
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 195 P. 988 (North Laramie Land Co. v. Hoffman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wyoming Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
North Laramie Land Co. v. Hoffman, 195 P. 988, 27 Wyo. 271, 1921 Wyo. LEXIS 14 (Wyo. 1921).

Opinion

Potter, Chief Justice.

At a former hearing of this case upon the motion of defendants in error to dismiss the cause and “dismiss and expunge ’ ’ the petition in error, the motion to dismiss the proceedings in error was sustained and an order of dismissal entered. (26 Wyo. 327, 184 Pac. 226.) At the same term that said motion was disposed of by that order, and within the time prescribed by the rules for an application for rehearing, a petition for re-hearing was filed by the plaintiff in error, and concurrently therewith a motion for leave to [276]*276amend the petition in error by causing it to be signed by local counsel of the plaintiff in error so as to cure the objection upon which the motion to dismiss was based and granted. Thereafter defendants in error filed a motion to strike said-motion to amend from the files. An oral argument was requested by the court upon the petition for re-hearing, as authorized by our rules, and it was submitted upon such argument and briefs, together with the two motions last above mentioned.

As stated in the former opinion, the petition in error was subscribed only by non-resident attorneys for plaintiff in error, who were not members of the bar of this state and had not requested or been granted permission to appear as attorneys in this court, either generally or for the purposes of this ease; and the ground of the motion to dismiss was that the petition in error, not having been subscribed by the plaintiff in error or by a member of the bar of this court as its attorney, was insufficient to constitute the commencement of proceedings in error, or to .give this court jurisdiction of the subject matter of the action.

Applying the statutory provision that “every pleading and motion must be subscribed by the party or his attorney” it was held that the attorney of a party to an action, who is authorized to subscribe pleadings “is an attorney who has the right to practice in the court wherein the case is pending”; and that the act of the non-resident attorneys in signing the petition in error could not be recognized by the court. Prom that the court concluded that the petition in error, not being properly subscribed, is not such a petition as will invoke the jurisdiction of the court, but is a nullity, and should be stricken from the files, and that, as proceedings in error can be commenced only by the filing of a petition in error, and an attorney of another state can be admitted only in a pending action, and not for the purpose of bringing an action, the proceedings, until such petition is filed, are not pending, “so as to permit the admission of a non-resident attorney for the purposes of the case. ’ ’ And, [277]*277Raving so concluded, it was ordered that the proceedings be dismissed.

It is alleged in the petition for re-hearing, and contended in support thereof, that this court erred in deciding that the petition in error was not sufficient to constitute the commencement of proceedings in error, or to give the court jurisdiction of the subject matter of the action. The correctness of the decision that a non-resident attorney who has not been admitted to practice in this state either generally or specially in the particular cause cannot properly sign alone a petition in error, and that a petition so signed is defective, is not directly or specifically challenged, nor would we feel inclined to recede from the decision on that point. It has long been an unwritten rule of this court thought to be controllable through the clerk’s office, that a non-resident attorney would not be recognized as having the right to commence proceedings in error, without an order upon application permitting it, or unless associated for that purpose with a resident member of the bar of the court, which latter condition it was supposed would be understood to require an association of names upon the papers filed in the case. The contention is that the defect aforesaid is not jurisdictional and does not render the petition insufficient-to commence the proceedings or to give the court jurisdiction of the cause.

The fact of the issuance and service of summons in error, although brought to the attention of the court at the former hearing, was not referred to in the opinion; such reference being then deemed unnecessary in view of the stated conclusion that the failure to properly subscribe the petition in error was a jurisdictional defect. For the same reason the provisions of the statute for summons in error were not referred to. But such provisions and the facts aforesaid as to the summons and certain other facts explaining the proceedings must be considered in disposing of the matters now before us. The provision of the statute that proceedings to obtain a reversal, vacation or modification of a judg[278]*278ment or final order shall be by petition in error setting forth the errors complained of was quoted in the former opinion, citing section 5111, Compiled Statutes 1910. That section, which has become Section 6873, Compiled Statutes 1920, provides further, following the. requirement for the filing of the petition in error: "There shall also be filed at the same time a precipe for summons, or the affidavit hereinafter provided for, or both, as the case may be. Thereupon a summons shall issue and be served in the manner provided by law for the service of summons in civil actions, and service on the attorney of record in the original case shall be sufficient. The summons shall be made returnable thirty days after its date unless said date would fall on Sunday or on a legal holiday, in which ease it shall be made returnable on the next succeeding secular or business day. It shall contain a státement that a petition in error has been filed in the case, stating the court in which it is filed, the date of such filing, the court in which the judgment, decree or final order sought to be reversed, vacated or modified was given or made, with the date thereof and the title of the case appealed from, as the same are stated in the petition in error. If service is not procured on said summons, a like alias summons shall be issued upon the filing of a precipe therefor. To constitute the commencement of such proceedings in error, service of summons must be made within sixty days from the filing of the petition in error. ’ ’ Then follows in the same section a provision for obtaining service by publication upon the filing of an affidavit that service of summons cannot be made within the state, and a concluding-provision that, “when service of summons or the publication of notice is made as above provided, the proceedings in error shall be deemed commenced as of the date of filing the petition in error. ’ ’

There was also filed concurrently with the petition in error an application, as provided by law, for an order directing the clerk of the district court to transmit to this court certain original papers in the case and a transcript [279]*279of certain specified journal entries; and an order conforming thereto was duly issued on the same date. In response to such order the papers called for were transmitted to and filed in the case in this court. That application was signed in the name of the plaintiff’s in error by “Pam & Hurd”, without designating the latter as attorneys, the name of the plaintiff in error being in typewriting, and “Pam & Hurd” being written. The summons in error was issued on the date of the filing of the petition and was duly returned and filed showing a service within three days after its issuance upon one of the attorneys of record in the original ease personally, by the sheriff of Laramie County, to whom the summons in error was addressed.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
195 P. 988, 27 Wyo. 271, 1921 Wyo. LEXIS 14, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/north-laramie-land-co-v-hoffman-wyo-1921.