Searl v. Shanks

82 N.W. 734, 9 N.D. 204, 1900 N.D. LEXIS 210
CourtNorth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedMay 4, 1900
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 82 N.W. 734 (Searl v. Shanks) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering North Dakota Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Searl v. Shanks, 82 N.W. 734, 9 N.D. 204, 1900 N.D. LEXIS 210 (N.D. 1900).

Opinion

Wallin, J.

From the record transmitted to this court we gather the following facts: The action originated in a City Justice’s Court at the city of Fargo, in the County of Cass, on the 9th day of August, 1899. On that da}' said city justice of the peace issued a summons in the action proper, and, upon affidavit therefor first duly filed, likewise issued a garnishee summons against said garnishee. The return day named in both summonses was August 19, 1899. Both of the summonses, with said affidavit, were placed in the hands of Charles E. Wilson, Esq., for service; said Wilson then being the sheriff of Cass county. The return indorsed on the original papets, and filed with the justice before the return day, shows that each and all of said papers were served or attempted to be served by said Wilson on the 10th day of August, .1899. The return indorsed on the garnishee summons shows that the sheriff, acting officially, served the garnishee summons and said affidavit upon said garnishee within the County of Cass. It also appears by an affidavit made by said Wilson, and filed with the justice, that he served said affidavit and garnishee summons upon the defendant in the action, and that such service was made in the County of Traill, N. D. A further affidavit shows that said Charles E. Wilson served the summons in the action proper upon said defendant, Michael Shanks, in the County of Traill. Upon the return day the defendant’s counsel, having appeared specially for the purpose, moved in defendant’s behalf that the action proper be dismissed for the reason that service of process had not been made upon the defendant, and hence that the court had never acquired jurisdiction over the person of the defendant. Pending a decision of said motion to dismiss, counsel for plaintiff moved for the issuance of a second summons in the action proper against the defendant in said action. The city justice granted the motion to dismiss the action, and denied the motion to issue a second summons. From this judgment plaintiff appealed to the District Court upon questions of law alone, and the District Court entered judgment affirming the judgment of the city justice. Plaintiff appeals from said last-mentioned judgment to this court.

The principal question presented for our determination is whether the action proper was lawfully dismissed by the city justice. If the action proper was lawfully dismissed, the garnishment action, which is ancillary to the action proper, would fall with that action. It is likewise true that, if the motion to dismiss the action was based upon sufficient grounds, said motion was properly granted, [206]*206despite the fact that plaintiff’s counsel made an effort to save the life of the action by asking the justice to issue a second summons in the same action. A second summons cannot lawfully be issued by a justice of the peace in any acti.on after its dismissal, nor in an action which the justice is in duty bound, under the law, to dismiss upon a pending motion for dismissal. That the defendant’s motion to dismiss the action was properly granted, we are entirely clear, for the reason that the attempted service of the summons in Traill county upon the defendant was abortive. The statute regulating actions commenced in Justice’s Courts, in its policy as well as in its language, does not permit any such service of process to be made in cases such as this. Justices’ Courts in this state, both under the constitution and the Justice’s Code of the state, are courts of limited jurisdiction. Const. § 112; Rev. Codes 1895, § 6633. The jurisdiction of these courts is limited, not only with respect to the subject-matter of their jurisdiction, but with respect to the amount in controversy, and also with respect to the territory over which their jurisdiction may be exercised and their processes served. In certain classes of cases, which are particularly enumerated in subdivisions numbered 1, 2, and 4 of secion 6633, supra, the summons, when issued by a justice of the peace, may be served in any county in the state; but the case under consideration, which is brought to recover a balance due on a board bill, does not fall under either of the subdivisions mentioned. This case manifestly falls under subdivision 3 of said section, which reads as follows: "Every other action must be tried in the county in which the defendant or one of several defendants resides or is served with summons; or in which a warrant of attachment is levied upon property of the defendant, except as provided in the next subdivision.” The next subdivision declares'that "an action upon a contract stipulating for payment at a particular place may be brought in the county in which such place is situated.” Whether the action was or was not instituted in the proper county is a point which has been broached by counsel, but the record does not permit a decisive answer to this question. We are not advised whether the defendant does or does not reside in Cass county, or whether he agreed to pay Iiis board bill at any place in .Cass county. We do know, however, that this action is not an attachment action, and that no property in the action has been seized by an attachment proceeding, and hence we are able to state that the venue of the action could not lawfully lie laid in Cass county by reason of any levy by attachment on defendant’s property in Cass county. There is no pretense of any such levy in the case. But we regard this question as of little practical importance. Whether the defendant does or does not reside in Cass — the action not being one in which defendant’s property has been levied upon in Cass county by attachment — is entirely immaterial. Assuming that the locus of the action is proper, there remains the stubborn fact that no service of the summons has been lawfully made upon the defendant. The service is not bad because [207]*207it was not served by an officer acting officially, inasmuch as the statute authorizes such service to be made by any person not a party to the action. Rev. Codes 1895, § 6640. The vice of the service consists in the fact that it was attempted to be made outside of the county of the justice, in a case where the statute does not permit such service to be made, but, on the contrary, forbids any such service. See Rev. Codes 1895, § 6641. The case at bar, as has been seen, does not fall within either class of the exceptions named in the section last cited, and hence is one in which service must be made within the county of the justice by whom the summons was issued.

But appellant’s counsel very earnestly contends that the statute regulating the subject of garnishment in Justice’ Courts, found on page 125 of the Session Laws of 1897 (see, also, Rev. Codes 1899, § 6676a), and all pre-existing provisions of the Code which regulate the service of a summons issued by justices of the peace, have been altered and amended. Counsel contends that the act of 1897, supra, authorizes the service of a garnishee summons and affidavit in any county where the garnishee or the defendant may be found. Under the facts in this case, we do not find it necessary to determine whether this proposition of counsel is or is not legally tenable. The attack upon the jurisdiction of the justice over the person of the defendant is not made upon the ground that the garnishee summons was not served upon defendant in the proper county. For the purposes of this opinion, without deciding the point, it may be assumed that such service was properly made in Traill county.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
82 N.W. 734, 9 N.D. 204, 1900 N.D. LEXIS 210, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/searl-v-shanks-nd-1900.