Stamey v. Barkley

60 A. 991, 211 Pa. 313, 1905 Pa. LEXIS 459
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedApril 10, 1905
DocketAppeal, No. 18
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 60 A. 991 (Stamey v. Barkley) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Stamey v. Barkley, 60 A. 991, 211 Pa. 313, 1905 Pa. LEXIS 459 (Pa. 1905).

Opinion

Opinion by

Mr. Justice Brown,

This proceeding was instituted by the appellee under the Act of June 10, 1893, P. L. 415, for the purpose of quieting title to coal land of which he ivas the legal owner. On the presentation of his petition to the court, setting forth that the appellants disputed and denied his right to the land and asserted a right in themselves to it by virtue of a certain written agreement, a rule was granted to show cause why an issue should “ not be framed by the court to test and determine the respective rights of the petitioner and W. H. Stamey, J. C. King and E. D. Carter, aforesaid, to the coal underlying the land described in the petition, and the right to mine and remove the same.” The appellants were not residents within the jurisdiction of the court, as was averred in the petition, and, in accordance with the second section of the act of 1893, leave was granted to serve the rule on them at their respective resi[315]*315dences in Reynoldsville and Erie, this state. The return of the sheriff was that he had served the rule on April 11, 1903, on the respondents “ by producing to each the original, informing each of its contents, and by handing’ to each a true and attested copy thereof, as well as a copy of the petition and article of agreement.” On May 2, 1903, two days before the return day of the rule, an appearance dé bene esse was entered for them, and on the return day a motion was made to set aside the service, for the reason that it had not been made on any one of them at his residence or place of business. On the same day this motion was refused, and, by the first assignment, we are asked to say that this refusal is reversible error appearing in limine.

In the absence of any provision in the act of 1893 for service of a rule beyond the jurisdiction of the court granting it, on persons not resident therein, there could not be such a service. The act provides that when the person or persons denying the right, title or right of possession of the person or persons in possession of the land are not residents within the jurisdiction of the court to which the petition for quieting the title is presented, that court may make an order that the rule to show cause why an issue should not be framed shall be served on the person or persons denying the right of the petitioner “ at their residence or place of business outside of the county or state where the land lies.” The place where such rule is to be served on nonresidents within the court’s jurisdiction is “ at their residence or place of business outside of the county,” and, as the statute so provides, service elsewhere on them outside of the county is not good. In Lehigh Valley Insurance Co. v. Fuller et al., 81 Pa. 398, the process against the insurance company, whose place of business was not in the county in which the same was issued, was served upon an agent of the company, the return being that service was so made upon him. Judgment was taken against the company by default. On the application to open it one of the reasons given was that there had not been proper service upon the company, the act of assembly requiring that service upon its agent in a county in which it did not reside must be at the usual place of business or residence of such agent. In reversing the court below for refusing to open the judgment, it was said by Shabs[316]*316WOOD, J.: “ Conceding that an attachment execution, with the clause of scire facias to the garnishee embodied in it, is a ‘ summons or other mesne process,’ the legislature has seen fit to provide that the service shall be ‘ at the usual place of business or residence ’ of the agent, and in no other way. A personal service is not sufficient. Why, it is nob our place to inquire. Ita lex scripta est.” The direction of the statute as to service of process must be obeyed, or the court does not acquire jurisdiction over the person named in it: Wright v. Douglass, 3 Barbour, 554. As there is no return that the rule was served in accordance with the order of the court, and as directed by the statute, and it affirmatively appears from the answer of the respondents that it had not been so served, the motion to set the service aside ought to have prevailed; and, but for a reason about to be given, the first assignment of error would be sustained.

On May 4, 1903, immediately after the court refused to set aside the service of the rule, the appellants, without any order directing them to do so, but voluntarily, so far as can be gathered from the record, filed an answer to the appellee’s petition. While it is true that in the concluding paragraph they aver the irregularity of the service and again ask that it be set aside, the answer as a whole is not only a denial of the material averments of the petition, but an assertion that John Mc-Gaughey, as the duly authorized agent of the petitioner, had entered into a valid contract with them for the sale of his coal. By this voluntary answer, going beyond a denial of the court’s jurisdiction over them, they submitted to it the question of the validity of the contract on which they rely as giving them a right to purchase the coal at a future time. They practically asked the court to determine their rights under the agreement, and having so voluntarily submitted that question to it, they submitted themselves to its jurisdiction. This cannot be questioned in the light of any of our cases. In Coleman’s Appeal, 75 Pa. 441, where we held that service of process had been properly set aside after an appearance de bene esse and the filing of an answer, the defendant had been compelled to answer by a rule, and, in answering under such compulsion, had reserved all exceptions to the order and manner of service.

If, upon the hearing of a rule for an issue, it shall appear to [317]*317the court that the facts set forth in the petition are true, it shall be the duty of the said court “ to frame an issue of such forms as the court shall deem proper between the respective parties, to settle and determine the right and title of the respective parties to said land.” Of this we have said: “ The control of the court over both the form and the substance of the issue is ample, and should be exercised to fit' the requirements of the real controversy between the partiesUllom v. Hughes, 204 Pa. 805.

That the appellants were properly made the plaintiffs we have no doubt. By their answer they boldly asserted the existence of a valid contract entitling them to purchase the appellee’s land at a future time, and insisted upon their right to have it continued.as a cloud upon his title. He was in possession of the land. If they had a right to oust him under the agreement given them by McGaughey the burdeii was on them to affirmatively establish it, and the issue between them and the appellee was properly made up for the determination of the following questions: “ (1) The authority of John Mc-Gaughey to make and sign the name of the defendant to the agreement of February 25,1902, a copy of which is attached to the petition. (2) Is such agreement, if John McGaughey had authority to sign the name of the defendant thereto, now in full force and effect ? (3) If such agreement had the name of the defendant signed thereto by John McGaughey through valid authority, are the plaintiffs entitled to specific performance thereof? (4) Have the plaintiffs now any right, title, interest or legal claim to the coal under the defendant’s land by virtue of the agreement of February 25, 1902, or acts and transactions under it between the plaintiffs and the defendant?” The second and third assignments are dismissed.

The issue was framed September 5, 1903.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
60 A. 991, 211 Pa. 313, 1905 Pa. LEXIS 459, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stamey-v-barkley-pa-1905.