Pereira v. Davis Financial Agency, Inc.

135 S.E. 823, 146 Va. 215, 1926 Va. LEXIS 324
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedNovember 18, 1926
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 135 S.E. 823 (Pereira v. Davis Financial Agency, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Pereira v. Davis Financial Agency, Inc., 135 S.E. 823, 146 Va. 215, 1926 Va. LEXIS 324 (Va. 1926).

Opinion

Campbell, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

The plaintiff in error and the defendants in error occupied the respective positions of plaintiff and defendants in the law action in the lower court, hence will be referred to as such in this opinion.

There is no dispute as to the facts of the case.

On April 11, 1925, plaintiff gave notice to the defendants, Davis Financial Agency, a domestic corporation with its principal office in the county of Albemarle, and John S. Davis, a natural person residing in the county of Fluvanna, as co-defendants, that on May 8, 1926, she would move the Circuit Court of Albemarle county for judgment for $2,325.50 against them, on two promissory notes of which they were, respectively, maker and endorser.

[218]*218On April 13, 1925, the notice of motion was served on John S. Davis, in Fluvanna county, the place of his residence, and there sought to be served upon the corporation, by delivering to John S. Davis, secretary and treasurer of the corporation, copies of the notice of motion. These notices were not served by an officer, but were served by C. S. Huffman, a private person, who made affidavit of the fact of service in the return which was made on April 14, 1925, within the five days prescribed by law.

The motion being duly docketed, on May 8, 1925— there being no appearance by the defendants — the circuit court entered judgment by default.in favor of the plaintiff for the sum demanded in the notice. On May 16, 1925, after the adjournment of court, an execution issued out of the clerk’s office of the circuit court on this judgment. On October 31, 1925, the defendants had served upon the plaintiff the following notice:

“You are hereby notified that on Saturday, November 7, 1925, we shall move the Circuit Court of the county of Albemarle, Va., at the court house thereof, to quash an execution out of the clerk’s office of the said circuit court on May 16, 1925, returnable to second July rules, on a judgment entered by the said circuit court on May 8, 1925, against the undersigned for the sum of $2,325.50 with interest on $1,276.00, a part thereof, from September 2, 1922, and on $1,149.00, a part thereof, from September 2, 1923, which judgment was docketed on May 8, 1925, in J. L. D. 7, page 14.

“You are also notified that at the‘same time and place a motion will be made to set aside the judgment as a nullity and void ab initio.

“This motion will be made upon the ground that the court had no juridiction whatsoever; the notice of [219]*219motion for judgment was never served on the Davis Financial Agency, a corporation, as required by the statute law of Virginia, nor did the court acquire jurisdiction of the undersigned, John S. Davis, because he had no legal notice of the proceedings.”

At the November term 'of the court the motion to quash the execution and set aside the judgment was heard and sustained.

In the petition of plaintiff the issue is presented thus:

“The questions of law involved are, whether a motion to vacate a judgment by default will be sustained, where venue is based on the ground that a domestic corporation is a party defendant and has its principal office in the county in which the proceedings are instituted, because notice of motion therein was sent out of the county to which returnable, to a county within the State, where a co-defendant resides, and was there served by delivering a copy of the notice in person,

“(a) to the natural person, and,

“.(b) to the secretary and treasurer of the corporation where he resides, by a private person, who made affidavit of these facts of service, the proceedings being regular in all other respects.

The Circuit Court of Albemarle county being a court of general jurisdiction, there can be no doubt that it had complete jurisdiction of the instant case. But the court may not proceed to exercise this potential jurisdiction thus conferred by general law, except by consent of the parties; or, lacking their consent, the court has acquired active jurisdiction of the defendants, or one of them, by lawful process, lawfully served.

The proceedings in the instant case were, by notice of motion, under section 6046 of the present Code of Virginia, the very object of which is to afford a ready remedy to the plaintiff, a more expeditious, a [220]*220simpler and cheaper remedy, shorn of the common law technicalities. The notice emanates from the plaintiff free from the pitfalls and dangers to which the rigid common law subjects processes issuing from the courts, and not until a return thereof has been duly made to the clerk of the court does the notice come within the control of the court. In so far as the sound policy of the law will permit, it should be construed with great liberality. To hold otherwise would defeat the very spirit and purpose .of the act itself..

In order to carry out this wide departure from the common law rule, the jurisdiction of the courts, venue of the action, service of process, and notice and procedure have become matters of legislative enactments, ruled by and controlled within the limits fixed by the lawmaking body.

Section 5890 of the Code provides that the circuit courts shall have original and general jurisdiction of all eases in chancery and civil eases at law.

Section 6049 of the Code provides in part: “Any action at law or suit in equity, except where it is otherwise especially provided, may be brought in any County or corporation. First: Wherein any of the defendants may reside; Second: If a corporation be a defendant, wherein its principal office is, or wherein its mayor, rector, president, or other chief officer resides.”

Section 6050 of the Code provides: “An action or suit may be brought in any county or city wherein the cause of action, or any part thereof, arose, although none of the defendants reside therein.”

Section 6046 permits a litigant to proceed by notice of motion in lieu of proceeding by action at law — -this term being used in its technical sense for the reason that in reality notice of motion is an action at law. Burks’ Pl. & Pr.

[221]*221In section 6046 it is further provided that the notice shall not be sent out of the county or city in which the judgment is to be asked, except in those cases in which process can be sent out under the provisions of sections 6055 and 6056. By section 6055 it is provided that: “Process from any court, whether original, mesne or final, may be directed to the sheriff or sergeant of any county or city * * *. If it appear to be duly served and good in other respects, it shall be deemed valid, although not directed to any officer, though executed by some other person.”

Pertinent to the case at bar, section 6056 provides that:

“Process against the defendant to answer in any action, suit, or motion brought under section six thousand and fifty, shall not be executed in any other county or city than that wherein the action, suit or motion is brought;” unless it be:

“An action against a corporation, or

•“An action against two or more defendants on one of whom such process has been executed in the county or city in which the action is brought; or

“Unless it be otherwise specially provided.”

It is the contention of the defendants that this proceeding is solely under the provisions of section 6046.

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Bluebook (online)
135 S.E. 823, 146 Va. 215, 1926 Va. LEXIS 324, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pereira-v-davis-financial-agency-inc-va-1926.