Young v. Towns of Dexter, Remington, & Wood

18 F. 201, 1883 U.S. App. LEXIS 2391

This text of 18 F. 201 (Young v. Towns of Dexter, Remington, & Wood) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Eastern Wisconsin primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Young v. Towns of Dexter, Remington, & Wood, 18 F. 201, 1883 U.S. App. LEXIS 2391 (circtedwi 1883).

Opinion

Dyer, J.

The argument of defendant’s counsel is, that after the repeal of the Revised Statutes of 1849, until the passage of the act of 1865, there was a total omission in the state legislation on the subject of the service of process to provide a method by which process should be served in suits commenced in courts of record against towns, and that all provisions of law in force during that period, relating to the service of process on corporations, had reference only to private and not municipal or public corporations; that rule 32 of this court, adopted in 1863, and in force when the suit at law against the town of Dexter was begun, was but a copy of the statutory provision of the state then in existence, and, like it, only related to suits against private corporations; that, in this state of legislation on the subject, such service of process on a town should then have been made, — if it could be made at all, — as would most nearly approach the statutory requirement of personal service; which, it is contended, in the case of a town, would be service on such officers as directly represented the town and had immediate charge of its affairs, namely, the supervisors of the town, and perhaps, in conjunction with them, the town clerk; and that, as illustrating the forcé of this position, it is observable that when the statutes are found to have prescribed the manner in which process could be served upon towns, — as in the Revision of 1849, in the act of 1865, and again in the Revision of 1878,— it is expressly provided that the summons shall be served, not only on the town clerk, but also on some other officer of the town, as the chairman of the board of supervisors.

On the part of the complainant the contention is that rule 32 of this court must prevail on the question; that in that rule no distinction is made between private and public corporations; that although it does not specifically designate any such officer as is commonly known in connection with a, town, or the management of its affairs,— except treasurer, — the term “managing agent” may be deemed sufficient to embrace such an officer of a town as the town clerk; that if this rule is not thus to control in the determination of the question, and if, therefore, recourse must be had to the state statutes, it is to be observed that, like the rule, no distinction was made in the statute then in force between private and public corporations, and that the language of the provision in the Revision of 1858 and in the act of 1863, wherein the “managing agent” of a corporation is named as a person upon whom service may be made, is sufficiently comprehensive to embrace such an officer of a town as the town clerk, who, [205]*205it is contended, by virtue of the duties devolved upon him by statute, is, in large sense, a managing agent of the town.

In view of the lapse of time since the entry of judgment in the suit at law against the town of Dexter, and the consequent effect of the statute of limitations upon the plaintiff’s demand, if it be held that a valid service of process was not made in that suit, the inclination of the court has been to seek' for some tenable grounds upon which to sustain the jurisdiction and judgment. But I cannot reconcile such a ruling with wliat seems to be the inevitable law of the case.

The intention of the legislature, in enacting that when a corporation should be a party to a suit, process should be served on the president or other head of the corporation, secretary, cashier, treasurer, director, or managing agent, seems manifest. There is hardly room for doubt that this statute was intended only to apply to private corporations, as distinguished from public or municipal corporations. The enumeration of officers upon whom, in such cases, process could be served, is peculiarly one applying to private corporations. As we have seen, this provision first appeared in the Revision of 1849, and in the same Revision there was another and additional provision for service of process on towns. Thus the law stood until 1858, when the first-named statute was continued, and the other dropped out, under the general repeal ing clause in the Revision of 1858. The neglect to continue in force the provision in relation to towns was evidently a casus omissus. And if it had been supposed that the statute relating to corporations generally, applied to towns, why did the legislature, in 1865, and while that statute was in full force, pass a special act providing for the service of process on towns ? The passage of that act is only reconcilable with the supposition that it was then well understood that the statutory provision then existing only applied to private corporations; and it may be here observed that at the present time the two provisions, somewhat changed in phraseology, but one relating to corporations generally, and the other to towns specifically, are part of the statutes of the state, each in full force. Then, further, the act of 1865 is not an amendment of the previous provision in relation to service on corporations. It is an act amenda-tory of the general law concerning the commencement of civil actions, and, so far as it covers the case of towns, it is a new and original act. In amending the statute in reference to service of process on corporations, as wras done in 1863, by providing for service on railroad companies, the legislature further manifested its understanding of the class of corporations covered by the statute. A town, it is true, has a treasurer, but it has no such officer as a president, a secretary, a cashier, a director, or a managing agent, in the sense in which those designations of official character or function are used in the statute.

The court must say that it can hardly think the question debatable. [206]*206One of the grounds upon which the supreme court of this state held, in Burnham v. Fond du Lac, 15 Wis. 193, that a municipal corporation was- not liable to garnishment, was that the statute which provided that “a corporation may be summoned as garnishee by service of notice * * * upon the president, cashier, treasurer, secretary, or other agent or officer of the corporation, ” etc., did not describe the officers of a municipal corporation, but only the usual principal officers of a private corporation.

If this view must be taken of the statute in relation to the service of process on corporations in force when the suit against the town of Dexter was begun, the same, view must be taken of rule 32 of this court, for the language of the statute and rule are substantially identical, and I cannot doubt that the rule was intended only to apply to private corporations. Presumably, the reason why the court did not by express rule provide for the case of municipal corporations was because it must have been supposed, as it naturally would be, that the state statute contained special provisions on that subject, and therefore that rule 32 and such statute would be a sufficiént guide in cases against such corporations.

But if the statute in force at the time, and rule 32, could be so construed as to embrace suits against municipal corporations, could the service of process on the town clerk of Dexter even then be held a good and valid service on the town ? Was the town clerk the head of the corporation or the managing agent of the town in such a sense as to make service upon him alone sufficient ?

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Related

City of Sacramento v. Fowle
88 U.S. 119 (Supreme Court, 1875)
Gillett v. Treganza
6 Wis. 343 (Wisconsin Supreme Court, 1858)
Mahr v. Young
13 Wis. 634 (Wisconsin Supreme Court, 1861)
Burnham v. City of Fond du Lac
15 Wis. 193 (Wisconsin Supreme Court, 1862)

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Bluebook (online)
18 F. 201, 1883 U.S. App. LEXIS 2391, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/young-v-towns-of-dexter-remington-wood-circtedwi-1883.