Tomkiw v. Sauceda
This text of 132 N.W.2d 125 (Tomkiw v. Sauceda) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
The declaration in this case seeks damages for injuries allegedly sustained by plaintiff in Detroit on October 11, 1957, in an automobile collision caused by defendant’s negligence. Plaintiff, a resident of Wayne county, Michigan, filed the declaration on September 14,1960, in Wayne county circuit court. Proof of service of summons on the Michigan secretary of State on September 23d was filed on October 25, 1960. It indicated that service was made upon the secretary of State and a duplicate copy of the summons was mailed to defendant at his last known address, in Toledo, Ohio, in accordance with the statute providing for service on nonresident motorists. 1 Attached to the proof of service was the envelope containing a copy of the summons, which had been mailed to defendant by registered mail. It had been returned undelivered and marked, “Moved, left no address.”
On October 20, 1961, plaintiff filed an affidavit and order of default, and on November 14, 1961, a “motion for default judgment or in alternative, alias summons.”
*384 On December 22, 1961, a circuit judge ordered the issuance of an alias summons and the quashing of the return of service, and thereby impliedly denied the alternative relief of a default judgment. The alias summons was issued on January 2, 1962, and allegedly served on the secretary of State on January 5, 1962, and a copy thereof allegedly sent by registered mail addressed to defendant at a Cleveland, Ohio, address on January 9, 1962. It appears from the motion to dismiss and answer thereto, each verified by affidavit, that attempts were made by plaintiff to reach defendant with copies of the original and alias summonses, sent successively by registered mail to addresses in several Ohio cities which appear to have been previously vacated residences of defendant.
• It is alleged that defendant received one of the copies of the alias summons some time in March, 1962, and on March 20, 1962, defendant’s attorneys entered a special appearance in the case.
In May, 1962, defendant made a motion to dismiss on the basis that the issuance of the alias summons was invalid. He claimed the statute of limitations 2 continued to run during a break in continuity of the action—a break caused by the invalidity of service •of the original summons and unreasonable delay in requesting issuance of an alias—and barred the action. Plaintiff’s answer to the motion to dismiss admitted all pertinent factual assertions, disputed defendant’s legal interpretation of their significance, and asserted affirmatively his several unsuccessful attempts to serve defendant with a copy of the summons. 3 After hearing arguments, a different judge *385 of the Wayne circuit granted the motion to dismiss, stating, however, that nothing therein contained should be construed as passing upon the propriety of or as affecting the subject matter contained in the order made and entered on December 22, 1961, by the other judge. Plaintiff claims an appeal from the order of dismissal and from the order of December 22, 1961, granting plaintiff’s motion for issuance of an alias summons, on a general appeal.
It is first to be noted that appellant can properly seek review of an interlocutory order or decree leading to a final order or decree on appeal from the latter. 4 Since the order for issuance of an alias summons and impliedly denying the alternative of a default judgment did not finally dispose of any portion of the subject matter, it is not a final order 5 and is, therefore, reviewable on appeal from the final order of dismissal.
The trial judge granted plaintiff’s motion for issuance of an alias summons. The form of the motion was in the disjunctive. It sought, in the alternative, .a default judgment or the issuance of an alias summons. Plaintiff had one of the alternative requests granted.. He cannot now be heard to complain of the granting of his own request. The situation is not unlike that of a consent order, about which Justice Cooley said: “But neither party can. complain of a consent order, for the error in it, if there is any, is their own, and not the error of the court.” 6 Therefore, plaintiff cannot claim error in the order granting his motion for issuance of an alias summons.
*386 Contrary to the self-contradictory phrasing of the final order, however, the validity of the interlocutory order is very much at issue as the announced basis of defendant’s motion to dismiss. That motion is before us for review without the benefit of a judicial statement of reasons for the order. In such a ease we must assume they are those proffered by the prevailing party. The basis proffered on motion in this case is the invalidity of the alias summons.
It is by this rather circuitous road that we arrive at the pivotal issue we are called upon to resolve, namely: Was the alias summons issued invalidly because of a break in continuity of the action?
Court Rule No 13, § 2 (1945) provided for the issuance of alias writs as follows:
“On the return of the writ, unserved, further writs, to be designated as first alias, second alias, et cetera, as the ease may be, may be issued as. of course at any time within 10 days after the filing of such return or within a reasonable time thereafter by leave of court on good cause shown.”
By quashing the previous return and ordering issuance of an alias writ, the court ruled in effect that the previous writ had not been served. This ruling accurately reflected the general rule, which is well stated at 8 Am Jur 2d, Automobiles and Highway Traffic, § 867, p 423:
“Some courts have construed such provisions to mean the defendant must have actual notice of the pendency of the action before jurisdiction over him is acquired, and have held that where the registered mail is returned undelivered, there is no valid service upon the defendant, particularly where the statute requires that the return receipt he made a part of the record of the substituted service, or requires personal delivery of the registered mail.” 7 (Emphasis supplied.)
*387 We find this position to be the most tenable, especially since the applicable Michigan statute (supra, footnote 1) does require that the return receipt be made a part of the record of service. As is noted immediately following that statement, however, the rule does not apply where it is proven that defendant refused delivery of the missive.
“Nonresidents cannot, however, refuse registered letters sent in accordance with the statute and then complain because no return receipt has been filed as the statute requires.”
No such proof has been offered in this case.
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
132 N.W.2d 125, 374 Mich. 381, 1965 Mich. LEXIS 335, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tomkiw-v-sauceda-mich-1965.