Stearns v. Taylor
Stearns v. Taylor
Opinion of the Court
The plaintiffs in error caused an attachment to issue in tbeir favor out of the circuit court for the county of Manistee against the defendants in error, and returnable in April, 1872, and tested the preceding November.
The writ seems to bave been returned in December, 1871, and the only evidence of service consisted of a certificate by the deputy of the sheriff of the county of Manistee, in these terms:
“ State oe Michigan, Manistee County, ss :
“I do hereby return that by virtue of tbe annexed writ of attachment, I bave this 20th. day of November, A. D. 1871, attached the several parcels of land described in an
It appeared from the inventory and certificate of appraisal, that the lands seized were all beyond the county of Manistee, part being in Wexford, and the rest in Mason county. No other property was taken, and no service of .any kind was made or apparently attempted oh the defendant Mehring, nor was any notice published. According to the return, however, as is seen, a copy of the inventory .alone, and unaccompanied by any copy of the attachment, was .served upon Taylor.
At the November term of the court for 1873, the cause was dismissed. The plaintiffs thereupon brought error, and they claim that the record of the cause sent up in answer to the writ of error, and from which the foregoing matters are extracted, shows that the dismissal was erroneous.
We think the sheriff’s return did not prove service of the attachment on any one. The statute points out the steps to be taken by the officer in making service, and thereby provides for giving needful information to a defendant. A copy of the attachment and inventory, certified by the sheriff, is to be served, and not one without the other. — Comp. L. 1871, § 6402. As this is a regulation as to the mode of bringing a party into court, and is intended for his protection and to enable him take measures for his
While, according to the record then, there was no evidence in the court below of any service of the writ on either defendant, it is pretty plain that the service which was made on property was without effect. The lauds-seized were in Wexford and Mason counties, and not ’ in Manistee, where the writ issued, and no service was made on property in the latter county.
The law, however, permits a service in a foreign county only after service in the county where the process is issued. —Comp. L. 1871, § 6402. There was, therefore, no case' for proceeding by publication, and no publication seems to have been attempted. The defendant Mehring did not appear at all, but Taylor did so to take a default against the plaintiffs for not declaring. Subsequently, however, this default was set aside under a stipulation in which it was agreed that his appearance should not waive any irregularity or defect in the process or proceedings. There was nothing, therefore, in his position to preclude any objection to which the proceedings would have been subject on a special appearance to complain of defects. Looking at the record, then, to form our judgment, it would seem that there was no service on either defendant, nor any valid service on property, nor any such appearance as would serve to waive the want of service or exclude objections; that no publication even was attempted, and that the proceedings had become, by reason of defects and omissions, wholly ineffectual, unless invested with new life by some stipula
As no error is shown, the judgment below must be affirmed, with costs.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- John W. Stearns and others v. Jeremiah L. Taylor and another
- Cited By
- 2 cases
- Status
- Published