Seeley v. Taylor

17 Colo. 70
CourtSupreme Court of Colorado
DecidedSeptember 15, 1891
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 17 Colo. 70 (Seeley v. Taylor) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Colorado primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Seeley v. Taylor, 17 Colo. 70 (Colo. 1891).

Opinions

Mr. Justice Elliott

delivered the opinion .of the court.

The assignments of error are to the effect, first, that the county court erred in rendering judgment without acquiring jurisdiction over the defendant Amy A. Seeley; second, that the court erred in entering default on the 30th day and in rendering final decree on. the 49th day after the last publication of the summons.

By the Code of 1887, sections 41 and 44, it is provided that when the service of summons is by publication it shall be deemed complete at the expiration of ten days from the date of the last publication ; and that from the time of the service of the summons the court shall be deemed to have acquired jurisdiction and to have control of all subsequent proceedings. The default and judgment not -having been rendered until more than ten days after the last publication of the summons, the.objection that the court acted without ac[73]*73quiring jurisdiction over the defendant is not well taken. Nevertheless, under the statute as it then existed the default and judgment were both prematurety entered; and the decree, if based upon such service alone, is subject to reversal for error. See Code of 1887, sections 34 and 41; also, Conley v. Morris, 6 Colo. 212; O'Rear v. Lazarus, 8 Colo. 608; Morton v. Morton, 16 Colo. 358, construing similar provisions of the original code.

It appears by the supplemental record that between five and six months after the rendition of final judgment the defendant Amy A. Seeley made application in writing to the county court to be relieved from the decree of divorce. She asked that the decree might be set aside and that she might be allowed to defend. The plaintiff first, and after his decease his representatives, under a rule of court, filed answers to the petition of defendant, and the defendant in turn filed replications to said answers. On the part of the defendant Amy, it was alleged that she had not been served with summons and had not appeared in the action. By the answers thereto it was alleged that the summons was duly served upon said defendant by delivering to her a true copy thereof more than sixty days before the final decree was rendered, and that upon receiving said copy she admitted such service in writing. Thus a formal, material and substantial issue relating to the service of the summons was framed, tried and detérmiñed in the action.

By the allegations and issue thus framed and submitted the proceeding on the part of defendant was in the nature of an action to impeach and set aside a judgment for want of service of summons; on the other side it was in the nature of a proceeding to amend the record in the action so that the same might show that there had been valid and sufficient service of summons duly made upon defendant sufficient in form, time and substance to meet the requirements of the statute and sustain the judgment theretofore rendered. An extraordinary proceeding from a common law stand-point, perhaps, but not. altogether unprecedented under the reformed [74]*74procedure. The proceeding was voluntarily commenced by plaintiff, was fairly within the scope of the statute, and the issue thus framed was triable by the court. See Code, sections 75 and 173 ; also, Hexter v. Clifford, 5 Colo. 168; Allen v. Tritch, 5 Colo. 222; Wilson v. Hawthorne, 14 Colo. 530.

The effect of the trial was not to determine the merits of the original action, but to determine whether or not the defendant had been duly served with summons for such a period of time as to preclude her from contending that she had not had her day in court in the action before judgment. The determination of the issue by the court was general. It was adverse to the application of the defendant to vacate the final judgment. The record does not disclose that any special findings either upon the law or the facts were requested by either party. Neither the evidence nor the rulings of the court during the trial have been brought here by bill of exceptions. Whether or not the court erred in reaching its conclusion cannot, therefore, be reviewed by this court. The presumption is that it did not err.

The only ground under the issues presented upon which the trial court could have properly denied the defendant’s application was that she had received valid and sufficient service of summons, and that by her own laches she had allowed the judgment to be rendered against her. In the absence of a bill of exceptions showing the contrary, we must presume that the court was governed bj' proper views of the law in arriving at its conclusion, and that the conclusion was fully warranted by the evidence. Knox v. McFerran, 4 Colo. 348 ; Rollins v. Board of Commissioners, 15 Colo. 103. The result of the trial, therefore, amounted to a judicial determination of record in the cause that the defendant had been duly served with summons the requisite length of time before default and judgment were entered. A formal amendment of the record to that effect would have been proper and according to the better practice (1 Black on Judgts. 125, 126) ; but under the circumstances of this case we do not [75]*75consider that it was absolutely necessary, since the pléadings of the parties, the issue tendered and accepted, and the trial and determination thereof by the court must always remain of record in the cause. Pleyte v. Pleyte, 14 Colo. 593, and same case in 15 Colo. 44; Doane v. Glenn, 1 Colo. 454; Beckwith v. Talbot, 2 Colo. 604; Wolfley v. Lebanon Mining Co., 3 Colo. 296.

In order to consider and give effect to the matters contained in the supplemental record it is not necessary to invoke the act of 1889, Session Laws, p. 78, nor to discard the doctrine announced in Polk v. Butterfield, 9 Colo. 325, and followed by Cross v. Moffatt and Hughes v. Felton, in 11 Colo. Neither of those cases refer to proceedings to amend the original record. They merely declare that under the then existing practice, error could not be assigned upon the decision of the lower court refusing to vacate a judgment previously rendered. The doctrine of those cases cannot be extended to include proceedings to amend the original record so as to make the same conform to the facts as they really existed at the time of the entry of final judgment. In numerous instances this court has expressly recognized and permitted amendments of the records of inferior courts by proceedings subsequent to final judgment, and in some cases such amendments have controlled the decision of the case in this court.

In Knox v. McFerran, supra, the following language is strikingly analogous to the view we have taken of the present case:

“ This cause was continued to give the appellee an opportunity to apply to the court below to amend the bill of exceptions. This accords with approved practice. Appellant’s counsel was duly notified of the motion to amend and appeared in response to the notice. * * * The appellants failed to except to the allowance of the amendment. Had appellants made it appear .to this court by a bill of exceptions that the lower court had no sufficient means of information by which to make the amendment, the motion to strike out [76]*76would rest upon a much more substantial foundation. But in the absence of such exception we must presume that the court below allowed the amendment upon proper evidence.”

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Bluebook (online)
17 Colo. 70, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/seeley-v-taylor-colo-1891.