Stoddard Manuf'g Co. v. Mattice
Stoddard Manuf'g Co. v. Mattice
Opinion of the Court
This action, based upon a default judgment of $568.05, entered on the 30th day of May, 1885, in favor of the plaintiff and against the defendant in a cause'pending in the territorial district court, resulted in a judgment for plaintiff, from which, and an order overruling a motion for a new trial, the defendant appeals.
The only proof of the service of process shown by the judgment roll in the former action, and which was admitted in evidence over the objection of appellant’s counsel, is contained in the following admission over -the signature of appellant indorsed on the back of the summons, ‘‘I hereby acknowledge service of the within summons and complaint this 25th day of April, 1885,” together with a recital contained in the judgment to the effect that the summons, with a copy of the complaint in the action, had been personally served on the defendant, George E. Mattice, more than 30 days prior thereto, and that no answer or demurrer to the complaint had been served, and no appearance had in any manner been made by said defendant. One of the statutory methods of establishing the fact that a summons
It is stated in the complaint that all the times hereinafter mentioned plaintiff was a corporation, and as no issue with reference thereto was tendered by the defendant’s denial of such allegation on information and belief, no evidence of that fact was required, and counsel’s contention with reference to that point is without merit. Comp. Laws, § 2908. *
Our conclusion is that the record presents no reversible error, and the judgment appealed from is affirmed.
Reference
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- 1. Where defendant loses no substantial right thereby, and such order would have been made if regularly applied for, the court may, m its discretion, and upon giving proper notice, even after suit has been commenced, grant plaintiif the right to sue required by Comp. Laws, § 4831, which provides that no action shall be maintained on a judgment without leave of the court being' first obtained. 2. Where the judgment recited that the summons had been personally served on defendant, and his acknowledgment of such service was indorsed thereon, it sufficiently appears that the service was properly made, though the acknowledgment failed to state the place of service. 3. On collateral attack it will be presumed that a court of general jurisdiction, rendering a judgment, obtained jurisdiction by a summons served within its jurisdictional limits. 4. A denial, on information and belief, that plaintiif is a corporation, is not sufficient to put in issue the question of plaintiff’s corporate existence, under Comp. Laws, § 2908, providing that it shall not be necessary to prove such corporate existence on the trial of a cause, “unless the defendant shall in his answer expressly aver that the plaintiff * * * is not a corporation.”