Elliott v. United Realty Corp.
Elliott v. United Realty Corp.
Opinion of the Court
delivered the opinion of the court.
This ease is before the court upon a writ of error to a judgment in an action of ejectment in which the United Realty Corporation was the plaintiff and R. H. Elliott, the plaintiff in error, was the defendant.
The parties will be here referred to in the positions which they occupied before the trial court.
A declaration with a notice appended to it under the provisions of section 5461 of the Code was returned, with notation of service, and filed at the second October rules in'the clerk’s office of the trial court. The terms of the Law and Chancery Court of the city of Norfolk are monthly in each month (except October), throwing therefore the second rules in each month on the second Monday instead of the third Monday. The term of court for the month of October, however, was made by the statute to commence on the second Monday in that month. Therefore in the month of October
The petition for the writ of error contains four assignments of error which will be taken up in the order in which they occur.
The first assignment of error is to the refusal of the trial court on December Í2th to continue the hearing of defendant’s motion to quash until a later date. The bill of exceptions in this respect states that there was pending a proceeding in unlawful detainer before the Corporation Court of Norfolk, between the same parties, concerning possession of the same property, in which a verdict had been returned in favor of the defendant and in which a motion made by the plaintiff for a new trial, originally set for hearing for December 3rd, was not then argued on account of £he unavoidable absence of the judge of the corporation court, but had been postponed until December 18th. It appears'
The second assignment of error is in the following language:
“2. The court erred in refusing to sustain defendant’s motion to quash these proceedings, because the notice attached to the original declaration filed on the third Monday showed on its face a further alteration in a different ink from that used by counsel for the plaintiff in altering the original typewriting in the copy served on the defendant and attested by the deputy clerk as ‘a true copy’ at the time of service, and the officer’s return on the back of the declaration could not be relied on by the plaintiff under the circumstances; and further because the alteration was such as to raise the presumption, if not a conclusion, that the mistake was detected upon attempting to file the paper, after service when the rules were to be written úp. The ink used in the last alteration being*757 similar to that used in the clerk’s office and different from that used by plaintiff’s attorney when, as he testified, he changed the original typewriting in his office.”
The motion to quash mentioned in this assignment was not made in writing but apparently made orally at the bar of the court, and its exact extent and purport is not as clear as it would have been if the motion had been made in writing. The court order of November 19th, which is the first order in the case, recites that the parties appeared by their attorneys and the defendant only appearing for that purpose moved the court “to quash the plaintiff’s case.” The order of 12th of December reciting the proceedings on that day refers to the motion as being “to quash the notice appended to and filed with the declaration.” The petition for a writ of error is in the nature of a pleading and doubtless the defendant has herein properly recited the motion which he made as being one “to quash these proceedings.”
This motion arose out of the following circumstances: The copy of the declaration had appended to it a copy of a notice addressed to the defendant, Elliott, the notice as delivered to him being as follows:
“You are hereby notified that the foregoing declaration in ejectment against you will be filed at the clerk’s office of the Law and Chancery Court of the city of Norfolk, Virginia, pn the 2nd rules to be held by the said court on the 2nd Monday in October, 1923, and damages will also be claimed of you in the sum of $1,000.00.
“W. L. Dev any, Jr., p. q.
“A Copy — Teste: James V. Trehy, Clerk.
“By W. L. Prieur, Jr., D. C.”
The plaintiff insists in argument here that the notice served on defendant states that the declaration would be filed on the second October rules, that the Monday in the month on which such rules would commence is fixed by law, and the statement in the notice that they would be held on the second Monday was a mere clerical mistake, and could not and did not mislead the defendant. Some support for this argument that the mistake is immaterial is found in the cases of House v. Universal Crusher Corporation, 115 Va. 558, 79 S. E. 1049, and Arminius, &c. Co. v. White, 112 Va. 250, 71 S. E. 637. But this contention does not meet the complaint made by the defendant, on which the assignment of error is based. The specific point at issue is whether there was an alteration in the original
“The truth of the officer’s return at the time it was made was not questioned, and in fact was relied on by the defendant to show that service was made upon him in person, but at the time of such service the notice attached to the declaration was the same as the ‘attested copy’ exhibited by him to the court, and that the original was altered, as shown by the correction in a different ink (being that used in the clerk’s office) after the officer had made his return to said office and before the docket was made up for the November term.” '
Some weight is attached by counsel to the fact that the clerk of the court attested the copy of the declaration and notice which was served upon the defendant. This attestation is mere surplusage and was unnecessary, because there was no record of the ease and would be none under section 5461 of the Code until the sergeant had made his return. The notice did not issue from the clerk’s office. Until it was returned by the sergeant there was no official paper or record in the clerk’s office which he could effectually attest; and his attestation before that time was not an official act.
A hearing on the motion was had in open court, and the judge heard the testimony of both attorneys for the plaintiff, the attorney for the defendant, of Mr. Prieur, the deputy who attested the copy, and of another deputy clerk. The witnesses and the court
We agree with the findings of the trial court. This court has examined the original declaration and notice and we find no satisfactory indication of an erasure. It is fairly evident that the changes in both papers were made in the clerk’s office, when they were taken there by the attorney for the plaintiff, either by the attorney or a deputy clerk, and both papers are now just as they were changed at that time. We apprehend that the learned trial judge would have been alert to discover any fraudulent alteration of the record in a case pending in his court, -if there had appeared to him any reasonable ground for such a presumption.,
We do not think the trial court committed any error in overruling the motion to quash the proceedings.
Error is further assigned as follows:
“The court erred in refusing to give the defend*763 ant a reasonable time to plead after overruling his motion to quash the proceedings, and in forcing an immediate trial, without giving a reasonable continuance.”
This assignment is based upon the conclusion of the bill of exceptions to the ruling of the court denying the defendant’s motion to quash the proceedings, which is as follows:
“And the foregoing is all the evidence introduced upon said motion to quash. Thereupon, the court, upon consideration thereof, overruled the defendant’s motion, and the defendant refusing to plead, the court, on motion of the plaintiff, by its attorneys, directed the case to proceed to trial, to which action of the court in overruling his motion and ordering his case to go to trial, the defendant, by his attorney, at the time, excepted.”
The court order of December 12th likewise states that the defendant refused to plead. By reason of this language and other matters certified by the trial court, the plaintiff, the defendant in error here, insists that the defendant should be taken to have entered a general appearance. But however this may be, and granting that the position assumed by the defendant, and insisted upon by him here, that he at no time waived his special appearance, and he was never before the court upon a general appearance, is correct, it results that the court merely executed the writ of enquiry upon the motion of the plaintiff. It appears that as soon as the court had stated its decision upon the motion to quash, the judge announced that the parties would have to go on with the trial. Whereupon the attorney for the defendant stated that he excepted to the ruling of the court; that he would not make a general appearance; that he was not given an oppor
“The court: The motion to quash is overruled. Counsel ask that the case be tried and I am ready to try it.
“Mr. Cole: I am forced to retire and seek such remedy as the law may provide. I am not prepared to go into trial now. I have not prepared any pleadings, and I cannot make a general appearance.
“The court: You must have known that it was not necessary to set a ease for trial on a dilatory plea on a jury day.
“Mr.' Cole: I do not know what your Honor’s practice is as to that. I asked that this ease, upon special appearance and motion to quash, go over until the other motion in the corporation court was disposed of. It was set on today over my objection, and being set, could only be tried as the case was developed, which stood on a special appearance and motion to quash.
“The court: I could postpone the case until three o’clock this afternoon.
“Mr. Cole: It would be impossible to get my witnesses here. One of my most important witnesses is a travelling salesman who lives at Ocean View, and may be out of the city. Others are oystermen and fisher*765 men, who could not be reached. It would be as impossible for me to get ready by three o’clock as to fly.
“Mr. Wells: The defendant has no standing in court in the absence of pleadings.
“Mr. Cole retired from the court room.”
The court was then placed in this situation — It had before it a ease in ejectment upon a writ of enquiry only, without-any appearance by the defendant, who had been duly summoned, the plaintiff being present and insisting upon a trial. Could the court refuse to execute the writ of enquiry? It had the right to do so, in its discretion, as it could have acceded to the request of defendant, but the exercise of its discretion would manifestly not be subject of review at the instance of the defendant under the circumstances existing here. It is true that the trial judge might very well have overlooked the refusal of the defendant to appear and plead, in order to avoid any semblance of a denial of justice to the defendant, but such action by the court was a matter of grace and not of right. The pleading in an action of ejectment is entirely simple. Section 5463 of the Code provides that the defendant in such action may demur to the declaration or plead thereto or. do both, “but he shall plead the general issue only, which shall be, that the defendant is not guilty of unlawfully withholding the premises claimed by the plaintiff in the declaration.” The defendant therefore needed no time in which to consider how he should plead. For aught that appears,- if the defendant had entered an appearance, put in his plea, and let the case be postponed till three o’clock, as suggested by the court, and had then filed an affidavit to the effect that he had a good defense, whether of lack of title in the plaintiff or title outstanding in a third party or otherwise, and stated his inability to have his witnesses present to sustain his defense
It further appears by a bill of exceptions that on the 13th day of December “came again the parties respectively by their attorneys and the defendant by counsel moved the court to set aside the judgment * * * * upon the grounds that said action of this court in entering final judgment is contrary to the law and the evidence, and because of error on the part of the court in refusing to quash the return of said declaration and in refusing to grant the defendant a continuance as asked for on the 12th day of December, 1923.” The refusal of the court to set aside the judgment furnishes the ground for the last assignment of error. The matters embraced in this exception have already been dealt with, and the court need not further consider this assignment.
Upon the whole ease we are of opinion to affirm the-judgment of the trial court.
Affirmed.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- R. H. Elliott v. United Realty Corporation
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