Read v. Rousch

189 Iowa 695
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedSeptember 29, 1920
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 189 Iowa 695 (Read v. Rousch) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Read v. Rousch, 189 Iowa 695 (iowa 1920).

Opinion

Weaver, C. J.

1. appearance : converting special into pearance. The question to be decided is very much simplified by the appellant’s admission of the fact that defendant was a nonresident of Iowa, at the time original notice was served upon him, and was then within the state of Iowa, in attendance up- ' • on court under subpoena to testify as a witness in another cause, and by the further concession that the petition in the present case was not filed within the time stated in the notice. Stated in the language of counsel for the appellant, the sole question now before the court is this: “Is the pleading which the appellee designated ‘Special Appearance of Defendant’ a special appearance or is it an answer or general appearance?” It is appellant’s contention that, while the defendant’s claim of immunity from service of process in this state, under the circumstances named, may be conceded, and while the failure to file the petition within the time stated in the notice may have entitled defendant to have the action dismissed, yet his allegation of another action already pending in another state, involving a determination of the same alleged cause of action, is in the nature of a plea to the merits of plaintiff’s claim, and operates as a general appearance to the action and consent to the jurisdiction of the court in which such action is brought.

I. While the precedents dealing with cases of this kind [699]*699are quite numerous, and the holdings therein are involved in no little confusion,, the best approved doctrine supports the reasonable proposition that a defendant cannot be heard to attack the jurisdiction of a court in which he is sued, and at the same time invoke suGh jurisdiction affirmatively in his own behalf.

Under our statute, a defendant may make a special appearance to an action against him, for the sole purpose of attacking the jurisdiction of the court. Such special appearance must be announced at the time it is made. It limits the objection to the consideration of jurisdictional matters only, and gives him no right to plead to the merits of the case. Section 3541, Code Supplement,. 1913.

The defendant in this case unquestionably attempted to exercise this statutory privilege, and confessedly did make a showing of at least one sufficient ground of attack upon the court’s jurisdiction over his person. The attempted service upon him of the original notice was a clear violation of his right to immunity from such process. He met the attempt at the threshold, in the manner prescribed by the statute, by announcing that he appeared for the sole purpose of attacking the jurisdiction of the court. -Such being the declared intent and purpose of his appearance, the paper filed by Mm should be given interpretation and construction consistent therewith, if it can fairly be done. True, if, when so read, it pleads matter which, in fairness, must be deemed purely defensive, or as calling for the exercise of the court’s judicial authority to pass upon any question except its own jurisdiction,, then the fact that the paper is entitled a “Special Appearance,” instead of an answer or other pleading, is immaterial, and ordinarily the appearance will be treated as general. It seems to us quite clear, in the present case, that the defendant and his counsel made a good-faith attempt to confine the attention of the trial court' to the single question of jurisdiction. It may be that the allegation of the pendency of another suii involving the same subject-matter would, in an answer, amount to a plea in abatement; but it does not necessarily [700]*700follow that the inclusion of such allegation in a statement of the defendant’s objections to the court’s jurisdiction has the effect to convert such objection into a plea to the merits of the plaintiff’s demand for judgment. And this is especially .true where no petition had been filed to which he could be held to answer or plead. To say the least, the matter so included in the objection is not inconsistent with the professed and declared “sole purpose” of the defendant in attacking the court’s jurisdiction. The pendency in another state of .another action between the parties, involving the same subject-matter of controversy, was alleged, not as a defense, but as a fact bearing upon defendant’s denial of the district court’s jurisdiction to entertain the action for any purpose. Whether such objection be sound is immaterial, if the other ground of attack upon the court’s authority in the premises is otherwise sustained by the record. This principle is recognized by the Illinois court in Supreme Hive Ladies of the Maccabees v. Harrington, 227 Ill. 511 (81 N. E. 533). There, the defendant specially appeared to question the court’s jurisdiction. The objection being overruled, judgment xvas entered in plaintiff’s favor. Subsequently, defendant moved the court to expunge the judgment entry,, because of its lack of jurisdiction in the premises. On appeal, plaintiff’s contention that the filing of this motion had the effect' of a general appearance to the action was overruled by the court, saying:

“It was wholly unnecessary for the defendant to follow up its pleas to the jurisdiction of the coxirt by objecting to the subsequent proceedings on the ground that the court had no jurisdiction of the person of the defendant; but, since all of these objections are entirely consistent with appellant’s pleas to the jurisdiction, it is difficult to see how they can be held to amount to a waiver of the jurisdictional question.”

So, also, in Wisconsin it is held that, where defendant, specially appearing, asks no relief except such as is consistent with want of jurisdiction of the courts over the defendant, there is no waiver of the objection. Kingsley v. [701]*701Great N. R. Co., 91 Wis. 380 (64 N. W. 1036); Sanderson v. Ohio Cent. R. & C. Co., 61 Wis. 609, 611; Blackburn v. Sweet, 38 Wis. 578.

In determining whether an appearance by a defendant is'general or special, the court will look to matters of substance, rather than matters of form. Rogers v. Penobscot Min. Co., 28 S. D. 72 (132 N. W. 792).

It will also have regard to the defendant’s apparent intent to make a special appearance,, if such intent is evident from the record. Crisp v. Gochnour, 34 S. D. 364 (148 N. W. 624); Thomson v. McMorran Mill. Co., 132 Mich. 591; Board of County Com. v. Smith, 25 Minn. 131; Woodard v. Milling Co., 142 N. C. 100; Moore v. Blake, 98 N. Y. Supp. 233.

Defendant sought no affirmative relief. He did not plead or offer to plead defensively to the plaintiff’s claim, but, on the contrary, carefully restricted his appearance, as required by the statute, to the sole purpose of denying the court’s jurisdiction. The trial court so treated the appearance, and based its ruling dismissing the case on the admitted fact of defendant’s nonresidence, and plaintiff’s failure to file his petition within the period fixed by the notice. For the reasons alreadjr suggested, we think there was no error in the ruling.

Nor is this conclusion to be avoided because the defendant asked that the action be dismissed. A few precedents may be found to the contrary effect, but the overruling weight of authority sustains our statement. The rule to which we-adhere is eminently just and reasonable, and is in clear accord with the provisions of the statute. See Milwaukee Elev. Co. v. Feucht-Wagner, 141 Wis. 266 (124 N. W. 264); Kingsley v. Great N. R. Co., 91 Wis. 380; Bierce v. Smith, 2 Abb.

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189 Iowa 695, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/read-v-rousch-iowa-1920.