Peel v. January

35 Ark. 331
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedMay 15, 1880
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 35 Ark. 331 (Peel v. January) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Peel v. January, 35 Ark. 331 (Ark. 1880).

Opinion

English, C. J.

This action was brought in the circuit ■court of Washington county by Dederick A. January and Jesse L. January, successors to the mercantile firm of D. A. January & Co., of St. Louis, against Samuel W. Peel, upon a judgment recovered by plaintiffs against defendant in the circuit court of St. Louis, Mo.

The transcript of the judgment, etc., wliich is the foundation of the action, exhibited with and made part of the complaint, shows that on the twenty-second of January, 1878, the plaintiffs commenced suit in the circuit court of St. Louis against defendant on an open account for goods, wares, and merchandise, etc.; that the writ issued, on the filing of complaint and bill of particulars, was made returnable on the first Monday of April, 1878, and that on the day of its issuance (the twenty-second of January, 1878,) it was served on the defendant personally, by the sheriff, in the city of St. Louis. At the return term defendant made default, and judgment was rendered against him for $329.38 —amount of the account sued on — and for costs.

To the present action on the Missouri judgment, the defendant filed an answer, in substance, as follows:

That at the time of the commencement of the suit in the circuit court of St. Louis, and at the time of the rendering of the judgment therein, defendant was a citizen and resident of this state, and not a citizen or resident, or domiciled in the state of Missouri; nor had he any property therein liable to seizure on execution, attachment or other process ; that he did. not appear to said action in person or by attorney, and was not served with process, and had no notice of the pendency of the suit, other than the service on the twenty-second of January, 1878, of a summons issued out of the office of the clerk of the circuit court of St. Louis on that day.

That before the commencement of the suit in St. Louis, plaintiffs had sued defendant on the same cause of action in the circuit court of Washington county, in this state, which was pending when the St. Louis suit was commenced, and when the judgment was rendered therein. ,

That defendant was not indebted to plaintiffs in the whole amount sued for and recovered by the St. Louis judgment, and that $120 of said account, for which the judgment was rendered, was incorrect and unjust.

That while said action was pending in the circuit court of Washington county, and defendant was resisting the same, and preparing his defense thereto, plaintiffs notified him that they would take the depositions of witnesses in the city of St. Louis on the twenty-second day of January, 1878, to be read as evidence on their part on the trial of said cause, and to then and there appear and cross-examine such witnesses.

Induced by this notice, defendant left his residence in Arkansas, and started to St. Louis on the nineteenth,' reached there on the twenty-first, and was present in said city on the twenty-second of January, 1878, for the purpose of personally cross-examining such witnesses as plaintiffs might produce against him under said notice.

That after he was thus .induced to go within the jurisdiction of the circuit court of St. Louis, plaintiffs, on the twenty-second of January, 1878, instituted their action against him in said court, upon the same demand on which -fclie judgment sued on in this action was recovered, and upon which their suit in the circuit court of Washington county, in this state, was then pending, and caused him to be served with process, etc.

And so defendant says that plaintiffs,fraudulently intending to obtain jurisdiction of his person before, and to prosecute the action aforesaid, on which said supposed judgment was obtained,in the said circuit court of the city of St. Louis, fraudulently caused by the giving of the notice to take the depositions aforesaid, the personal presence of defendant within the jurisdiction of the said circuit court, on the twenty-second day of January, 1878, and at the time of the service of the said process in said suit upon him; and that thereby the jurisdiction of the person of this defendant, by the service of said process, issued and served on said twenty-second of January, 1878, in said action in which said supposed judgment was rendered in said circuit court of the city of St. Louis, by the acts and doings of said plaintiffs, as aforesaid, was fraudulently obtained, and that •such judgment should be held null and void; wherefore ■defendant prays judgment.

The plaintiffs demurred to the answer on the following grounds:

“1. Because the answer attempts to set up fraud in procuring jurisdiction of defendant’s person, and the facts by him stated show that he went voluntarily within the jurisdiction of said circuit court of St. Louis.

“ 2. Because said answer does not deny that said plaintiff's have a just and legal cause of action against said defendant.

“ 8.' Because said answer admits the validity and justness of more than half of plaintiffs’ claim, and attempts to defeat the whole action by alleging that only $120 of their claim is unjust.

1.Jurisdic-tion: Obtained by fraud.

“4 Because said, answer is otherwise insufficient in law.”

The court sustained, the demurrer, and defendant resting, judgment was rendered against him in favor of plaintiffs for the amount of the judgment sued on, and defendant appealed.

I. Taking the allegations of the answer to be true, as admitted by the demurrer, the personal presence of appellant within the jurisdiction of the circuit-court of St. Louis, and the service of process on him there, were obtained, by a fraudulent contrivance of appellees.

True, he went there voluntarily, but if induced to go there by a false notice — a notice intended to bring him there for the purpose of serving him with process, and not designed in good faith to afford him an opportunity to cross-examine witnesses, it was a fraud upon the jurisdiction of the St. Louis circuit court.

In Carpenter v. Spooner, 2 Sandford, 717, defendant went voluntarily into the city of New York, where he was induced to go by means of a false letter which plaintiff' caused to be written to him, for the purpose of inducing him to go there, that he might procure service of a writ upon him.

An application was made to set aside the service, and the court said: “ This court will not sanction any attempt to bring a party within its jurisdiction by fraud and misrep-' resentation. And where, by a false statement or fraudulent pretense, a party is brought within the jurisdiction and there served with process, the service will be set aside. Ye recollect a case where a party, was entrapped' into .the state out of another state, and then served with process, and there the service was set aside.”

2. Laws States: Common law.

In Goupil v. Simonson, 3 Abb. Prac. R., 474, the sheriff induced Simonson to come within his bailiwick by a false statement that his son was imprisoned, there, and. then served an order of arrest upon him, and he was, on motion, discharged.

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Bluebook (online)
35 Ark. 331, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/peel-v-january-ark-1880.