Hembrow v. Winsor
Hembrow v. Winsor
Opinion of the Court
'The opinion of the court was delivered by
Appellant sued to recover a commission for the sale of a tract of land in Sumner county, of which the appellee and four other defendants were joint owners. The appellee, W. M. Winsor, is a resident of Marion county, Kansas. The other defendants were residents of Illinois and nonresidents of Kansas. At the' commencement of the action appellant filed his affidavit in attachment and caused a writ to be levied upon the undivided four-fifths interest of the nonresidents in the land and obtained service upon .the nonresident defendants by publication. At the •same time he caused a summons to be issued for W. M. Winsor, the appellee, directed to the sheriff of Marion county, which was duly served and returned. The •appellee entered a special appearance and moved to quash the summons on the ground that the court lacked .jurisdiction because the action was not rightly brought
The sole question is whether the action was rightly commenced in Sumner county. If it was, the court erred in sustaining the motion to quash. The code provision is:
“Where the action is rightly brought in any county, according to ■ the provisions of article 5, a summons shall be issued to any other county against any one or more of the defendants, on the plaintiff’s przecipe.” (Civ. Code, § 61.) .
This section has been construed and held to mean that where one defendant acknowledges service the action is rightly brought in that county and a summons may issue to another county for the other defendant. (Hendrix v. Fuller, 7 Kan. 331.) And in Reynolds v. Willamson, 68 Kan. 239, 74 Pac. 1122, it was held that an action against a nonresident may be brought in any ■county where he has property, and a summons may issue to another county. In that case the summons was for the nonresident defendant, who at the time the action was commenced was personally present in the •other county. If it could rightly issue to another county to be served upon a nonresident it could issue for the purpose of being served upon a resident of the state. By their voluntary appearance the court acquired jurisdiction of the nonresident defendants, and from that moment, at least, the cause was rightly brought in Sumner county. The acceptance or acknowledgment of service or the voluntary appearance of a defendant is ■equivalent to service. (Civ. Code, § 68.) Moreover, un
The judgment is reversed and the cause remanded for further proceedings.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- William Hembrow v. W. M. Winsor (W. M. Winsor, Appellee)
- Cited By
- 5 cases
- Status
- Published
- Syllabus
- SYLLABUS BY THE COURT. Jurisdiction — Defendants—Nonresident of State — Nonresident of County. An action may be rightly brought against nonresident defendants in a county where they have property, and in such an action where a resident of the state has been rightly joined as a defendant, and service upon the nonresident defendants has been obtained by publication, or where they have entered an appearance in the action, a summons may lawfully issue to another county for the resident defendant.