Sanchez v. Haynes

35 Fla. 619
CourtSupreme Court of Florida
DecidedJanuary 15, 1895
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 35 Fla. 619 (Sanchez v. Haynes) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sanchez v. Haynes, 35 Fla. 619 (Fla. 1895).

Opinion

Taylor, J.:

J. M. Haynes, the defendant in error, on May 31st, 1889, instituted his suit in assumpsit in the Circuit Court of St. Johns county, in the Fourth Judicial Cir[620]*620cuit of Florida, against Edward C. F. Sanchez, the plaintiff in error, who then resided, as the praecipe for .summons in the cause recites, at Gfainesville, in Alachua -county, in the Fifth Judicial Circuit of Florida. Summons acl respondendum was issued by the clerk of the Circuit Court for St. Johns county directed to the sheriff of Alachua county, commanding’ him to summon the defendant to appear before the Circuit Court of St. Johns county, on the rule day in July, 1889. This summons was served on the defendant by the sheriff of Alachua county within that county. On the rule day in July, 1889, to which the summons was returnable, the defendant failed to enter any appear.ance in the cause, and a judgment by default was then taken against them, and on the 19th day of July, 1889, a final judgment was entered by the clerk. On the 11th day of September, 1889, at a term of the said Circuit Court then being held, the defendant presented a motion in open court to set aside and open the said final judgment and default upon the grounds, in substance, as follows: (1) Because no legal service had ever been made over the defendant, and the court had not acquired jurisdiction over the defendant’s person in the cause; (2) because the suit was brought in St. Johns county, and the service made by the sheriff of Alachua county in the latter county, where defendant then resided; (3) because there was nothing local in the suit, it being a suit upon account, no property being involved, and which cause of action did not .accrue in St. Johns county, and the defendant at the time of the commencement of the suit, and for twenty years prior thereto, had resided in Alachua county, Florida (4) because said suit was irregularly and illegally brought in said St. Johns county, when the defendant resides in Alachua county, and the cause of action did [621]*621not accrue in St. Johns county; (5) because the bring-' ing of said suit, the entry of judgment by default, and the entry of final judgment was irregular, illegal and unauthorized; (8) because said final judgment shows-upon its face that it is irregular, illegal and void. This motion was supported by the affidavits of the defendant and others showing that the defendant had a meritorious defense to said suit if allowed to defend the same, the details of which it is unnecessary to mention. On the 12th of September this motion was denied by the court, upon the ground that it was not made within sixty days after the entry of the final judgment sought to be vacated. From the judgment thus entered and from the order denying his said motion the defendant brings writ of error.

The errors assigned are as follows: 1st. The court erred in refusing the motion to set aside the judgment by default and the final judgment entered therein on the 19th day of July, 1889. 2d. Because there had never been any legal service of a summons in said cause upon the defendant, and the Circuit Court of St. Johns county had never acquired jurisdiction over defendant. 3d. Because said suit was brought in St. Johns county, Florida, and the service made by the sheriff of Alachua county on the defendant, who was a resident of Alachua county. 4th. Because there is nothing local in the suit, it being a suit upon account, no property being involved, and which cause of action did not accrue in St. Johns county, the defendant at the time of the commencement of the suit residing in Alachua county. 5th. Because the entry of said default and final judgment was illegal and unauthorized by law. 6th. Because there was no legal proof of the claim before the clerk, and the defendant was not notified of the proof to be offered, and had no opportunity to contest same.

[622]*622It is unnecessary for us to notice the first assignment of error, the refusal of the defendant’s motion to vacate the default and final judgment, since the writ of error is taken to the judgment itself, and brings under review all the proceedings anterior to the motion to vacate, and the conclusions we have reached annuls the whole proceedings without reference to the matter of such motion.

The second assignment of error is well taken, to the effect that the Circuit Court of St. Johns county had never acquired jurisdiction over the person of the defendant by any legal service of process to bring him into court. Section one of Chapter 3721 of the laws, approved May 19th, 1887, entitled “An act to provide for the issuing and service of writs, process and notices in civil suits and proceedings at law in certain cases, ’ ’ provides as follows: “That hereafter when in any civil suit or proceeding at law in any of the courts of this State, for any purpose whatever, the defendant, defendants, or any one of them therein, resides or is in any county of this State other than the one in which said suit or proceeding is commenced or is pending, any writ, writs, process or notices as authorized by law in civil suits or proceedings, when the defendant or defendants reside in the county where the suit or proceedings is commenced, shall be issued and appropriately directed, and the sheriff or other proper officer of said county in which said defendant, defendants or any one of them resides or may be found, shall execute and serve said writs, process or notices; and return thereof shall be made to the court from which the same emanated, and such execution or service and return shall be valid to all intents and purposes, and the defendant or defendants so served legally bound thereby: Provided, however, That before any writ, [623]*623process or notice shall issue by virtue of this section, the plaintiff, or some one in his behalf, shall make affidavit before some officer of this State authorized to administer oaths that said suit or proceeding is, or was, instituted in good faith and with no intention on the part of the plaintiff or plaintiffs, as the case may be, to annoy or defraud said defendant or defendants.” Section four of the same act provides as follows: “That nothing in this act shall authorize the bringing of any civil suit or proceeding at law in any other county than the one in which the property in litigation is, or in which the cause of action accrued. But when there is nothing local in the suit it may be brought in any county where the defendant or any one of the defendants, if there be more than one, shall reside.”

Under this statute the plaintiff instituted his suit in St. Johns county, in the Fourth Judicial Circuit, while the defendant, as is shown by the praecipe in the cause and by the statutory affidavit of good faith filed therewith, resided in Alachua county, in the Fifth Judicial Circuit of Florida, and had the clerk of the Circuit Court of St. Johns county to issue summons ad respondendum directed to the sheriff of Alachua county, and it was served by the sheriff of the latter county within his county upon the defendant. As the law existed long prior to the passage of the above-mentioned statute, a civil suit of the kind under consideration could be brought only in the county in which the defendant resided, or the county in which the cause of action accrued. McClellan’s Digest, § 5, p. 811. Until the adoption of the above-mentioned act of 1887, however, there was no provision of law by which service of process could be procured, in'-such cases, when the suit was instituted in any county other thau the one in which the defendant resided, unless the defendant could [624]

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Tower Credit Corporation v. State
187 So. 2d 923 (District Court of Appeal of Florida, 1966)
Bailey v. Crum
162 So. 356 (Supreme Court of Florida, 1935)
Ritch v. Adams
136 So. 719 (Supreme Court of Florida, 1931)
Nettles v. Gulf Fertilizer Co.
83 So. 298 (Supreme Court of Florida, 1919)
County of Santa Rosa v. Trobuck
77 Fla. 86 (Supreme Court of Florida, 1919)
Phillips v. State ex rel. Dorner
77 So. 665 (Supreme Court of Florida, 1918)
Baker & Holmes Co. v. Indian River State Bank
61 Fla. 106 (Supreme Court of Florida, 1911)
Chapman v. Reddick
41 Fla. 120 (Supreme Court of Florida, 1899)
Parkhurst v. Stone
36 Fla. 456 (Supreme Court of Florida, 1895)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
35 Fla. 619, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sanchez-v-haynes-fla-1895.