State Ex Rel. Gallagher v. District Court

114 P.2d 1047, 112 Mont. 253, 1941 Mont. LEXIS 59
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedJune 24, 1941
DocketNos. 8,223 to 8,226.
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 114 P.2d 1047 (State Ex Rel. Gallagher v. District Court) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Montana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State Ex Rel. Gallagher v. District Court, 114 P.2d 1047, 112 Mont. 253, 1941 Mont. LEXIS 59 (Mo. 1941).

Opinions

MR. CHIEF JUSTICE JOHNSON

delivered the opinion of the court.

By these four petitions for writ of supervisory control or other appropriate writ, the relators seek the annulment of district court orders denying their motions to quash the service of summons upon them in four damage actions. These four petitions, like the four motions in the district court to quash service, have been consolidated.

On the 7th of November, 1940, an automobile which had left Bremerton, Washington, some time on the preceding day, was *255 wrecked four miles west of Bozeman. There were six persons in the car, some of whom were taken to the Bozeman hospital and four of whom have filed the damage actions in question. In the car were found some Illinois license plates, but how many of them does not appear from the record.

The complaints are virtually identical and each alleges that at the times in question the defendants, relators here, were engaged in the business of buying, selling and trading in autos at Bremerton, Washington; that plaintiff was in defendants’ employ and with five other employees was hired to drive a used Mercury automobile from Bremerton, Washington, to Chicago, Illinois, upon defendants’ business; that it was defendants’ duty to furnish a safe automobile, but by their negligence they furnished and suffered to be used by plaintiff an automobile which they knew to be unsafe and dangerous, in that the brakes were improperly adjusted and the exhaust system defective; that they failed to warn plaintiff of the dangerous conditions and of the precautions to be used, and that while one of plaintiff’s fellow employees was driving with due care the poisonous gas from the exhaust, by reason of the defects, leaked into the closed body of the car, rendered partly unconscious the occupants, including the driver, by reason of which the car while so driven and operated by the driver, in defendants’ employ, swerved off the road; that the driver could not and did not stop it and plaintiff was severely injured. The only essential difference is that in one of the complaints it is alleged that the plaintiff was driving at the time of the accident.

Service was had upon the Secretary of State as attorney for the defendants under the provisions of Chapter 10, Laws of 1937, and the motions to quash the service were based upon four grounds, only two of which are urged in the petitions here, namely:

“ (1) Whether, under the provisions of said Chapter 10 of the Laws of the Twenty-fifth Legislative Assembly of 1937, the service of summons is valid, and conferred jurisdiction over the persons of the relators, in view of the undisputed evidence that *256 at the time of the accident alleged in the complaint the automobile involved in said accident was owned and operated by-Ralph D. Wilson, and was not operated by relators, or either of them, by themselves or their agent; and
“(2) Whether the provisions of said Chapter 10 of the Laws of the Twenty-fifth Legislative Assembly of the State of Montana of 1937 permit service of summons upon a nonresident defendant in a case where both plaintiff and defendant are nonresidents of the State of Montana, or whether the said Act was intended solely for the benefit of resident plaintiffs against nonresident defendants.”

The motions to quash were based upon the records and files and “upon affidavits and oral evidence, if any, to be presented at the hearing.” The defendants introduced as evidence the oral testimony of -Wilson, one of the persons in the ear at the time of the accident; a conditional sale contract by which immediately before leaving Bremerton with the other five men Wilson bought the car from defendants for $850, payable $250 down and the balance over a term of twenty-four months; the defendant’s receipt for the down payment; and the affidavits of defendant Gallagher and of his office employee. The plaintiffs in the damage actions introduced as their evidence the affidavits of F. L. Morris, credit manager of the Bozeman hospital, L. E. Westlake, sheriff of Gallatin county, and R. E. Jones, a Montana highway patrolman. The defendants filed in rebuttal affidavits of Wilson and relator Gallagher.

The motions to quash having been denied, these applications were filed. In their returns to the alternative writs the respondents raise the contention that the defendants waived their special appearances and made general appearances by several acts, such as attacking the court’s jurisdiction over the cause of action and not merely its jurisdiction over the defendants personally, by requesting additional time of the trial court, and by having the evidence and proceedings on their motions certified as bills of exceptions for use in these proceedings. However, *257 in view of onr eonelnsions it will be unnecessary to consider these points.

The petitions are virtually identical; that in cause 8,223 alleges that an action was filed against relators by George Doyle and summons issued and served upon the Secretary of State of the State of Montana as their attorney under the provisions of Chapter 10 of the Laws of 1937; that both Doyle and the relators were and are nonresidents of Montana and residents of the state of Washington. Annexed to the petitions as exhibits are the complaints and the record of the proceedings and testimony on the motions to quash.

No question is raised as to the validity of the statute in question, which has already been approved by this court (State ex rel. Charette v. District Court, 107 Mont. 489, 86 Pac. (2d) 750, and State ex rel. Thompson v. District Court, 108 Mont. 362, 91 Pac. (2d) 422), or as to the due compliance with its provisions; the only questions being the two stated above. The first is a question of fact, which requires a summary of the evidence.

Wilson testified that he had not been employed since September 27, 1940; that on the morning of November 6, 1940, the day before the accident, he purchased the car in question from the relators under the conditional sale contract above mentioned, which, however, was not placed of record until November 9, 1940, two days after the accident. He testified in part as follows:

“Q. Going down to Salina, Kansas, weren’t you? A. Yes. And Mr. Gallagher said he knew some people he wanted to ride with me and if I would go out of my way up to Chicago that they would buy some of the gas and help me drive. So I had a short time to get there and get back, so I figured that I would just drive day and night till I got there; I would save time. And if they helped me with some gas that would help me out, too.
“Q. And that was the occasion of their being with you on that trip? A. Yes.” * * *
*258 “Q. As a matter of fact, you and these other boys were going down to Chicago to drive back some new Oldsmobiles for Smith-Gallagher, weren’t you ? A. I wasn’t.
“Q. Or Smith-Oldsmobile, or Gallagher? A. I wasn’t. I I don’t know what they were going for, or where they were going when they got there, or what they was going to do, or anything about them.

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Bluebook (online)
114 P.2d 1047, 112 Mont. 253, 1941 Mont. LEXIS 59, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-gallagher-v-district-court-mont-1941.