Stuckert v. Thompson

164 S.W. 692, 181 Mo. App. 518, 1914 Mo. App. LEXIS 367
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedMarch 3, 1914
StatusPublished

This text of 164 S.W. 692 (Stuckert v. Thompson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Stuckert v. Thompson, 164 S.W. 692, 181 Mo. App. 518, 1914 Mo. App. LEXIS 367 (Mo. Ct. App. 1914).

Opinion

ALLEN, J.

-This is an appeal from the action of the circuit court in quashing an execution issued upon a judgment rendered in an attachment suit.

The record discloses that in 1910 the defendant,. then a nonresident of the State of Missouri, was the owner of an estate in certain lands in Lincoln county; and that plaintiff instituted an action by attachment against the said property of the defendant. Upon the filing of an affidavit of defendant’s nonresidence, a writ of attachment was issued to- the sheriff of Lincoln. county, and a summons issued directed to the “Sheriff of Red River County, Texas.” The latter writ found its way into the hands of one King Reed, said to have been a deputy sheriff of said county of Red River, State of Texas. And he, on February 22,-1911, made affidavit before the clerk of the county court within and for said last mentioned county, to the effect that he had served the summons, and the copy of the petition annexed thereto, upon the defendant, in the aforesaid county and State, on February 21, 1911, by delivering to defendant a true copy of said summons and petition as furnished by the clerk of the Circuit Court of Lincoln County, Missouri.

The clerk of said county court of Red River, Texas, certified to the official character of the affiant, King’ Reed, certifying that the latter was ‘ ‘ a duly appointed and acting deputy sheriff within and for said county of Red River, and an officer of said county court,” and “duly authorized by law to serve process within the said county of Red River and State of Texas. ’ ’ This certificate was signed personally by the clerk of said county court and attested with, the seal of such court.

[521]*521The defendant made default, and judgment was rendered for the amount of plaintiff’s claim, and special execution ordered to issue against the attached property. The execution issued on such judgment, and to which the said motion to quash was directed, commanded the sheriff of Lincoln county as follows: “That of described real property (attached) and if the same be not sufficient, then of any other of the goods and chattels, lands and tenements of the said defendant, you will cause to be made the debt and the costs aforesaid,” etc.

I. The judgment ordered special execution to issue, but the execution which was in fact issued commanded the sheriff to satisfy the judgment first out of the attached property,, and if the latter be not sufficient then out of any other ‘ ‘ goods, chattels, lands and tenements” of the defendant. It is quite clear therefore that the execution is one which could not be lawfully issued in an attachment proceeding, upon constructive service, for such execution may only issue against the property attached. [See Sec. 2331, Rev. Stat. 1909.]

II. However, the sole ground of the motion to quash the execution is that the court acquired no jurisdiction to render a judgment against the property of defendant, for the reason that the “return” of the writ of summons directed to the sheriff of Red River county, Texas, was void upon its face. It must have been upon this ground then that the circuit court sustained the motion to quash, and this upon the theory that the judgment was void; and this is the vital question here presented for review.

Section 1778, Revised Statutes 1909, provides that in any of the cases mentioned in the preceding section, 1770, the plaintiff may cause a copy of the petition, with a copy of the summons, to be delivered to each [522]*522defendant residing or being without this State, and at any place within the United States or Territories, twenty days before the commencement of the term, etc.; and that such service be made by “any officer authorized by law to serve process within the State or Territory where such service is made, and shall be proved by affidavit of such officer, stating the time and manner of such service, made before the clerk or judge of the court of which affiant is an officer. ’ ’ And it is further provided that ‘ ‘ such clerk or judge shall certify to the official character of the affiant, and to his authority to serve process within the State or Territory where such service was made.”

In the case before us, this writ, as we have said, was directed to the “sheriff of Red River county, Texas.” It was not served by such sheriff, nor by any one purporting to act for him or in his name and behalf, but by one King Reed, purporting to act as deputy sheriff, and who made return thereof in his own name. The affidavit, constituting proof of such service, was made before the cleric of the Texas court, who certified to the official character of the deputy sheriff, and that the latter was duly authorized by law to serve process within Red River county, Texas; and there is no question here relative to the certificate itself. [See Givens v. Harlow, 251 Mo. 231, 158 S. W. 355; Priest v. Capitain, 236 Mo. 447, 139 S. W. 204; Murdock v. Hillyer, 45 Mo. App. l. c. 292.]

It has long been the rule in this State, and it is the settled common law doctrine, that in order to constitute a valid return to service of process by a deputy sheriff, such return must be made in the name of the sheriff, by the deputy as such, and that a return made by a deputy sheriff in his own name is void. [See State ex rel. v. Fisher, 230 Mo. l. c. 339; 340; 341, 130 S. W. 35, and authorities there referred to.] “The officer who executes process must return it, and when a deputy performs the duty, he must sign the return in the name [523]*523of the sheriff or other principal by him as deputy. A return made in his own name by a deputy sheriff is void.” [Murphree on Sheriffs, Sec. 856.]

There can be no doubt that, had the service here in question been made within this State, the writ, having been directed to a sheriff, served by a deputy sheriff, and the return thereof made by the latter individually and not in the name of his principal, such return would have been void. [See State ex rel v. Fisher, supra.] In serving such process the deputy can act only in the name and on behalf of his official principal, the sheriff, and the return must be made accordingly.. And the question presented in this connection is whether the same rule should be applied to extraterritorial service, such as is here involved.

In Priest v. Capitain, supra, in treating of the right of a foreign officer, who had executed the process of a court of this State to amend his return, it is said, that such foreign officers as are pointed out by our statute, supra, “as suitable persons to render service in particular cases pending in Missouri,” are recognized by the statute as individuals merely and not as officers. And it is pointed out that a person thus serving process of our courts, in a sister State, “makes no official return, but makes an affidavit of what he has done, ’ ’ the latter being ‘‘merely evidence of service. ’ ’

But nevertheless, where the writ is directed to a particular sheriff of the foreign State, it would seem to inevitably follow that his deputy (if then authorized to serve it at all) must make the service in the name and on behalf of the sheriff, and make proof of service accordingly; for, in such case, it does not appear how a deputy sheriff can be said to have any-authority to serve the writ, other than that which he may possess by virtue of being the sheriff’s subordinate. Individually he is a stranger to the writ. It is not directed to him, nor to a class of officers, in general, “authorized by law to serve process” within his State.

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Related

Flint v. Noyes
27 Kan. 351 (Supreme Court of Kansas, 1882)
Russell v. Grant
26 S.W. 958 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1894)
State ex rel. Bond v. Fisher
130 S.W. 35 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1910)
Priest v. Capitain
139 S.W. 204 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1911)
Givens v. Harlow
158 S.W. 355 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1913)

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Bluebook (online)
164 S.W. 692, 181 Mo. App. 518, 1914 Mo. App. LEXIS 367, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stuckert-v-thompson-moctapp-1914.