Paulin v. Sparrow

91 Ohio St. (N.S.) 279
CourtOhio Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 23, 1915
DocketNos. 14277 and 14278
StatusPublished

This text of 91 Ohio St. (N.S.) 279 (Paulin v. Sparrow) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Paulin v. Sparrow, 91 Ohio St. (N.S.) 279 (Ohio 1915).

Opinion

Donahue, J.

The plaintiff in error contends

that the original return of the officer serving the summons upon her in cause No. 13818 on the civil docket of the common pleas court of Ma-honing county is fatally defective, that the decree of court purporting to determine her rights in the property described in her petition is void as to her, and that that court had no jurisdiction to order an amendment of the return of the officer to conform to the admitted facts. Counsel for defendant in error concedes that unless plaintiff in error was duly and legally served with summons in that action the judgment in that case would be void as to plaintiff in error and no bar to a recovery in the second action.

There is a substantial difference between defective service and defective return of service. If the service is defective the court acquires no jurisdiction over the person of the defendant and no jurisdiction to make or enter any order, judgment or decree binding upon a defendant defectively served with process, but if the service was in fact [287]*287duly and legally made, as directed by the statutes of this state, the court has jurisdiction under the provisions of Section 11363, General Code, to order the return of the officer amended to speak the truth. Where it affirmatively appears from the record of a court of general jurisdiction that the defendant has not been legally served with process, a decree purporting to determine the rights of such defendant is void. If, however, the record is silent on the subject of service or upon any question material to the service it will be presumed that notwithstanding the silence of the . record the court had obtained jurisdiction over the person of the defendant. Lessee of Moore et al. v. Starks, 1 Ohio St., 369. The rule is well stated by Williams, J., in the case of Kingsborough v. Tousley et al., 56 Ohio St., 450, in this language: “The rule generally prevails, and is nowhere more firmly established than in this state, that when it does not otherwise affirmatively appear from the record, it will be conclusively presumed, whenever a domestic judgment of a court of general jurisdiction is drawn in question in any collateral way, that the court regularly acquired and lawfully exercised its jurisdiction over the parties.”

The original return of the sheriff in this case does not affirmatively show that the minor defendant was not legally served with process, but it does fail to state sufficient facts to show that the service was made in manner and form as the statute directs. The statute in force at the time of the' purported service of this summons provided that “When a defendant is under the age [288]*288of fourteen years, the service must be upon him, and also upon his guardian, or his father; or, if neither his guardian nor his father can be found, then upon his mother, or the person having the care of such infant, or with whom he lives * * * (Section 5047, Revised Statutes of 1880.)

The petition in this action averred that Emma S. Davidson was a minor, that her father, William Davidson, was dead and that she had no duly appointed guardian. These facts should have been noted in or upon the summons as a guide to the sheriff in making the service. It does not appear, however, that anything was noted in or on the summons except that she was a minor. The return upon the summons is as follows: “* * * I personally served the with in named defendant, Emma S. Davidson by delivering to her a true and certified copy thereof with endorsements thereon. I also left a like copy with Mary J. Davidson with whom the minor child resides. * * This service of the summons in this case upon the minor defendant Emma S. Davidson, was in direct conformity with the statute providing for service of summons upon minors under fourteen years of age, but the return of the officer serving the process, taken alone, does not affirmatively show that fact. This return was defective in that it failed to state the facts, now admitted to be true, to-wit, that the father was dead and that no legal guardian had been appointed for the defendant, but in so far as the return states any facts that it was the legal duty of the sheriff to [289]*289state in relation to the manner of service of summons it does not affirmatively show that the service was not properly made.

Upon the hearing of the motion to amend the return of the sheriff it was admitted by plaintiff in error that her father was then dead, that she had no legal guardian at the time and that she then resided with her mother, Mary J. Davidson, in Mahoning county, Ohio. These admissions, taken in connection with the return of the sheriff, show a valid and legal service of summons in that action, vesting jurisdiction in the court, not only to make and enter the decree against this defendant quieting the plaintiff’s title in the lands described in his petition but also to order the return to be amended by stating these facts therein, not for the purpose of conferring, by ex post facto amendment of the return, jurisdiction upon the court to render a valid judgment, for that judgment was either valid or invalid at the time it was rendered and the subsequent amendment could not change that fact, but rather for the purpose of affirmatively showing upon the record that the court had acquired jurisdiction by process over the person of the defendant and perpetuating the evidence of that fact.

The important question is not whether the return of service is defective, but rather, was the defendant in fact duly and legally served with process ? . So far as this defect in the return of the sheriff is concerned, the defendant is not now contending that she was not duly and legally served with summons. Her contention is that the [290]*290original return does not fully show that fact. It is true that she disputes the facts stated in the return, but conceding for the present that the facts stated in the return are true and binding upon' her, then the only question is, Will a defective return which does not affirmatively show upon its face that no service was in fact made upon defendant defeat the- jurisdiction of a court over a defendant who was in fact legally served with process? If this defendant had come into court before judgment and moved to quash the service, and these further facts that are not stated in the return of the officer were admitted or proved, the court would have promptly overruled the motion to quash and ordered the return of the sheriff amended to speak the truth. If at any time after the rendition of this judgment, this plaintiff had made a direct attack upon it and it had been admitted or made to appear by the evidence that she had been duly and legally served with summons, but that the return of the sheriff was defective in that it did not show the facts authorizing the service of a copy of the summons to be made upon Mary J. Davidson, her petition would have been promptly dismissed.

It would be a strange construction of the law that would permit a defendant to admit that he had been duly and legally served with summons and yet deny the jurisdiction of the court to render a valid judgment against him merely because the return of the officer serving the process is defective.

[291]*291Upon the hearing of the motion of Margaret Sparrow to order the return of the sheriff amended, the plaintiff in error denied the truth of the matters and things stated in the return of the officer in relation to the manner of service upon her. In support of this contention she offered as a witness Mary J.

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Bluebook (online)
91 Ohio St. (N.S.) 279, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/paulin-v-sparrow-ohio-1915.