Williamson v. Taylor

122 S.E. 530, 96 W. Va. 246, 1924 W. Va. LEXIS 88
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedApril 8, 1924
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 122 S.E. 530 (Williamson v. Taylor) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Williamson v. Taylor, 122 S.E. 530, 96 W. Va. 246, 1924 W. Va. LEXIS 88 (W. Va. 1924).

Opinion

MEREDITH, PRESIDENT:

Defendant seeks to reverse a judgment rendered against him by the circuit court of Cabell County in an action of debt upon certain notes.

The summons was issued June 27, 1922, returnable to July ■Rules. It was executed June 28th as shown by the return “by posting and leaving posted a true copy thereof on the front door of the usual place of abode of W. L. Taylor 1018 Tenth Ave. in Cabell County, West Virginia, the said W. L. Taylor not being found at his usual place of abode in Cabell County, West Virginia, on the above date, his wife and no member of his family being found at his usual place of abode in Cabell County, West Virginia, on the above date.”

In defendant’s special plea in abatement filed in due time, he alleges that at the time of the alleged service of summons in the case, he had no usual place of abode in Cabell County, West Virginia, but that his usual place of abode was at Omar, Logan County, West Virginia, and that the alleged service of summons by posting a copy thereof at the front door of the supposed place of abode of the defendant was without authority. The issue joined thereon was tried by the court. Defendant did not formally waive a jury and he assigns this as error; but we prefer to dispose of the issue on the merits rather than upon a mere technicality. The court found that defendant’s usual place of abode was. at No. 1018 Tenth Avenue in the City of Huntington, refused to sustain the truth of the plea and to dismiss the action. Defendant took proper exceptions to the finding of the court, pleaded nil debet, issue was joined, and the case was tried by a jury, resulting in a verdict and judgment for plaintiff.

While a number of errors are assigned relating to the trial of the case before the jury, we deem it proper to discuss but the one raised by defendant’s plea in abatement. If the court did not obtain jurisdiction by process duly served upon the defendant, then it could not proceed to trial of the main issue. After raising that issue by plea, if that *248 question was decided against Rim, Re did not waive it by pleading tRe general issue as to tRe debt declared on and proceeding to trial thereon.

Our statute, section 6, chapter 124, Barnes’ Code, 1923, provides that a summons may be served as a notice is served under section 1, chapter 121 of the Code. Section 1, chapter 121 provides:

“A notice, no particular mode of serving which is prescribed, may be served (1) by delivering' a copy thereof in writing to the party in person; (2) if he be not found, by delivering such copy at his/ usual place of abode, to his wife or to any other person found there who is a member of his family^ and above the age of sixteen years, and giving information of the purport of such copy to the person to whom it is delivered; or (3) if neither his wife nor any such other person be found there, and he be not found, by having such copy posted at the front door of said place of abode. ’ ’

The point of inquiry is whether defendant’s usual place of abode on June 28, 1922,, the date the "summons for him was! left posted on the front door of a room in a building at 1018 Tenth Avenue in Huntington was in that room. If that was then his usual place of abode, the service was valid; if it was not, the service was not a legal service.

In discussing this statute in Capehart, Adm’r. v. Cunningham, Adm’r., 12 W. Va. 750, Judge Moore says:

“What does the statute mean by the expression ‘his tosuaZ place of abode’?
When we consider that the object of the statute was, to enable the defendant to know, or have notice of the action against him, that he might protect his rights therein, it is clear the statute meant his usual place of abode eo instanfi, that the summons was posted,, not a place of casual abode, but one of present abiding. It would be absurd to hold, that a boarding house, or place where a person stopped temporarily when visiting a city or country on matters of business or socially, should be considered his usual place of abode when his visit or stay had ended and he absent, so as to make the posting of a summons on the front door thereof legal notice.”

In Grant v. Dalliber, 11 Conn. 234, the defendant had *249 been living with his family in his dwelling house in Tor-rington, but while he was confined in state’s prison at Wethersfield, service of a. writ was\ had by leaving a copy “At his usual place of abode” in Torrington, where his family was then residing. It w¡as held that the prison was not his usual place of abode, since he was restrained there against his will, and had a place of abode at Torring-ton.

But in D.unn’s Appeal, 35 Conn. 82, the statute required that service of an application for the appointment of a conservator, should be made by leaving a copy at the usual place of abode of the respondent; Dunn, the respondent, was in the county jail as a prisoner, and the house where he last resided, had, while he was imprisoned, been sold by a trustee of his estate and possession taken by the purchaser. It was held that service might be had by leaving a copy with him at the jail since he then had no other place of abode.

In White v. Primm, 36 Ill. 416, it was held that a hotel or boarding house at which a stranger from another state is sojourning for a few days is not to be considered his usual place of abode for the service of process under a statute similar to ours.

In Kline v. Kline, 104 Ill. App. 274, it was held that leaving the summons at defendant’s former place of residence, with a person not a member of her family who im-miediately forwarded it to defendant, did not satisfy the statute which provided that it should be left at the defendant’s usual place of abode with some person of the family, of the age of ten years or upwards and informing such person of the contents thereof.

In Norton’s Estate, 66 N. Y. Supp. 317, it was held that where it appears that a defendant, at the time of an alleged substituted service on him by leaving a copy of the summons at his dwelling house, as authorized by statutes, had in fact no dwelling house in the state, having' shortly before removed therefrom, the service was insufficient.

In Mygatt v. Coe, 63 N. J. L. 510, 44 Atl. 198, it was held that under a statute providing that the service of summons on a defendant shall be made upon him in person *250 or by leaving it at bis dwelling bouse or usual place of abode, tbe dwelling bouse or usual place of abode, w'itbin tbe meaning of tbe statute is tbe place where be is actually living at tbe time wben tbe service is made; that leaving tbe summons at defendant’s former residence, wbicb be bad recently abandoned, was not sufficient.

In Missouri, K. & T. Trust Co. v. Norris, 61 Minn. 256, 63 N. W.

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Bluebook (online)
122 S.E. 530, 96 W. Va. 246, 1924 W. Va. LEXIS 88, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/williamson-v-taylor-wva-1924.