Rotch v. Humboldt College

56 N.W. 658, 89 Iowa 480
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedOctober 17, 1893
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 56 N.W. 658 (Rotch v. Humboldt College) 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
Rotch v. Humboldt College, 56 N.W. 658, 89 Iowa 480 (iowa 1893).

Opinion

Robinson, C. J.

The defendant Humboldt College is a corporation which has existed for more than twenty years. Before the year 1876 it was known as the Humboldt College Association, and also as the Humboldt Collegiate Association, the name being used interchangeably. In June, 1871, the association gave its promissory note, payable to O. Prescott and others in June, 1876. In August, 1882, the note was extended to August, 1885. In November, 1889, the plaintiffs recovered judgment on the note against the association for the sum of sixty-five thousand, six hundred and thirty-seven dollars and fifty cents. An execution was issued, and forty thousand dollars were received to apply on the judgment. The remainder is unsatisfied.

In March, 1880, John McLeod recovered against the association judgment for the sum of nine hundred and seventy-eight dollars and eighty-six cents and costs. An execution issued on that judgment was levied upon two forty acre tracts of land in Humboldt county, then owned by the association, which were sold under the execution. Redemption from the sale not having been made, a sheriff’s deed for the land was executed to McLeod in June, 1882. In May, 1883, he conveyed it to Estella B. Puller. A few days later she gave a mortgage thereon to D. K. Pearsons, guardian, to secure the payment of a note for five hundred dollars. In' September, 1889, the mortgage was foreclosed, and the land was ordered sold to satisfy the sum of six hundred and forty-eight dollars and eighty-four cents and attorney’s fee and costs, which were adjudged to be due on account of the note. Under an execution issued to satisfy the judgment, one of the tracts of land was sold to the defendant Pearsons, and the other to one P. Pinch, who afterwards transferred the sheriff’s certificate of sale to the defendant, the Humboldt County Bank. In December, 1890, a sheriff’s deed was issued [482]*482to the bank for the tract sold to Finch, and in February, 1891, a sheriff’s deed was issued to Pearsons for the tract sold to him. In March, 1891, this action was commenced to subject the two tracts to the payment of the unsatisfied portion of the judgment in favor of the plaintiffs. They contend that the judgment in favor of McLeod was void and of no effect. The college is insolvent.

i. judgment: tacLat1urisaaicDoSceTIefective service. I. The first objection urged to the validity of the judgment in favor of McLeod is that the district court of Humboldt county did not have jurisdiction to render it, for the reason that notice of the action was not served on the C0peg6j an(j judgment was rendered without an appearance for it. There are two answers to that objection, one of which may be stated as follows: A notice was in fact served on the college. The record as it now exists tends to show that it was defective, but the court found “that due and legal service had been had on the defendant of the pendency of said cause.” It is the well settled rule in this state that where a defective notice or defective proof of the service of a notice is adjudged by the trial court to be sufficient, the judgment rendered thereon can not be attacked collaterally. Woodbury v. Maguire, 42 Iowa, 339, 342, and cases therein cited; Shawhan v. Loffer, 24 Iowa, 217, 226; Tharp v. Brenneman, 41 Iowa, 251, 253; The Farmers Insurance Co. v. Highsmith, 44 Iowa, 330; Lees v. Wetmore, 58 Iowa, 170, 177; Bunce v. Bunce, 59 Iowa, 533, 535; Stanley v. Noble, 59 Iowa, 666, 669; Fanning v. Krapfi, 68 Iowa, 244, 248; Gray v. Wolf, 77 Iowa, 630, 631. The other answer to the objection is that the parties have stipulated that the collegiate association “was duly and legally served with original notice.”

[483]*483___ _ filing petition: record. [482]*482II. The objection to the judgment on which the plaintiffs chiefly rely is that the filing of the petition [483]*483was not noted in the appearance docket. Section 200 of the Code is as follows: “The clerk shall, immediately upon the filing thereof, make in the appearance docket a memorandum of the date of the filing of all petitions, demurrers, answers, motions, or paper of any other description in the cause; and no pleading of any description shall be considered as filed in the cause, or be taken from the clerk’s office until the said memorandum is made.” The petition in the McLeod case was delivered to the clerk for filing, and he indorsed it as filed, but made no memorandum thereof in the appearance docket. The plaintiffs contend that by reason of his failure to make such memorandum the court had no jurisdiction of the subject-matter of the action, hence that its judgment was void.

In the case of Padden v. Moore, 58 Iowa, 703, it appeared that certain garnishees were required to appear in court on a day specified. They went to the town in which the court was held on that day, but, being informed that the court had adjourned, they returned to their homes and gave the matter no further attention. The court had adjourned on the day before that on which they were required to appear to some subsequent date. After that adjournment a commissioner was appointed, without notice, to take the answers of the garnishees, and a day was fixed for them to answer. They did not appear, and the commissioner so reported. A default was afterwards entered against -the garnishees, and judgment entered against them without notice. At a later term of court notice was served on them to show cause why execution should not issue on the judgment. In response to that they presented to the clerk a paper containing a showing why execution should not issue, which was, in effect, a protest against the action of the court in rendering judgment against them, on the. ground that it lacked jurisdiction to do so. The paper [484]*484was marked as filed, but the filing was not entered on the appearance docket, and the paper was not left with the clerk. This court held that the showing so made by the plaintiffs was not an appearance by them to the proceeding; that the showing was not filed, because no memorandum thereof was made in the appearance docket, and that it did not become-a part of the records of the court. The question involved in that branch of the case was whether the showing made operated to give the court jurisdiction and render valid the judgment which before had been void. This court answered the question in the negative by holding that there had been no appearance in the case within the meaning of section 2626 of the Code. Under the facts in that case it may well have been said that there was no intention to make the showing a part of the record. The facts involved in the two cases are so unlike that the decision in the Padden case can not be regarded as controlling in this.

In Nickson v. Blair, 59 Iowa, 531, a motion to dismiss the action made- by the defendant, and based upon the fact that no memorandum of the date of filing the petition had been made in the 'appearance docket, was sustained, and this court held the ruling to be correct. It may be said of that case that advantage was taken of the defect in the proceedings by a direct attack, made in due time. This court has never held that a judgment rendered in a case in which the filing of the petition was not noted in the appearance docket is void.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
56 N.W. 658, 89 Iowa 480, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rotch-v-humboldt-college-iowa-1893.