East v. Whitmer
East v. Whitmer
Opinion of the Court
Plaintiff brought an attachment suit on a note against defendant before a justice on the sixteenth of January, 1899. The ground of attachment was “that de
The only error alleged grows out of an instruction given by the court, in which the jury were told that when the suit was begun the justice before whom it was instituted had the power to fix the return day of an ordinary summons (had one been issued in the action), from ten to seventy-four days after the issuing of such process, which would then have to be served ten days before the particular return day fixed by the justice. The instruction then submitted to the jury the issue under the evidence whether a suit begun by an ordinary summons on the day of the attachment and made returnable in a reasonable time thereafter (within the limit allowed to set such returns) could have been personally served upon defendant ten days before the time it was made returnable. There was no error in this direction under the statute then applicable. R. S. 1889, sec. 6145; Temple v. Cochran, 13 Mo. 119; Kingsland v. Robinson, 15 Mo. 657; Ellington v. Moore, 17 Mo. 424; Chariton Co. v. Moberly, 59 Mo. 238. It is conceded by appellant that defendant returned from an absence on a trip to his usual place of abode on January 22, 1899, or within six days after suit was brought. Now, if an ordinary action of debt had been brought against him on the sixteenth of January ánd made returnable (as the justice would have had full power to do) seventeen days thereafter, defendant might have been personally served by
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.