Porter v. Vandercook
Porter v. Vandercook
Opinion of the Court
By the Court,
This is an appeal from an order of the circuit court, refusing to set aside a summons in a foreclosure suit, on motion. The action was commenced in June, 1859. The summons was signed by the respondent’s attorney, and required the appellants to answer within twenty days, &c. The objections taken to the summons were: That it does not run in the name of “ The state of Wisconsinis not sealed with the seal of the court; is not properly tested in the name of the presiding judge; and does not give the appellants ninety days to answer, but requires them to answer within twenty days.
When the nature and office of a summons are considered, as indicated by the code of procedure, which code is incor
Perhaps the better practice is to specify in the summons the true time, as prescribed by law, for the defendants to answer the complaint. Still, this court held, in the case of Lawrence vs. Brown, decided at the January term, 1859, not reported, that the phraseology of the summons in this particular was not material; that the defendant must be presumed to know the law, and the time which it gave him to answer; and that therefore a summons should not be set aside, even though it did not conform to the law in that respect, and require the defendant to answer accordingly. This was the extent of the decision in that case, and upon so unimportant a question of practice, must be considered decisive as to the objection taken to the summons in the present case. The appellants undoubtedly well knew that the law gave them ninety days to answer the complaint, and were not misled by anything which the summons contained.
It is further objected, that the order giving ten dollars costs to the respondent’s attorney, on overruling the motion to set
The order of the circuit court refusing to set aside the summons, is affirmed.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- PORTER v. VANDERCOOK
- Cited By
- 13 cases
- Status
- Published