49 W. Va. 282 | W. Va. | 1901
Harrison Blair and other adults, together with Melvin Vinson, Joseph Vinson, Lillie Pasley and William Pasley, infants, who sued by their next friend, Harrison Blair, plaintiffs, brought their action against James R. Henderson, late sheriff of Logan County, before H. P. Clark, justice, for the recovery of money due for damages for wrong in which the plaintiffs claimed judgment for three hundred dollars. On January 6, 1894, the return day of the summons, “The plaintiff appeared and not ready for trial, and J oseph Peck appeared as agent for defendant, and made a motion to quash the papers on the grounds that plaintiff had failed to file his complaint in this action upon return day of summons, and his motion was overruled by the justice,” and the cause was continued until 12th of January, 1894, on which day bill of complaint filed by plaintiff, and the defendant failing to appear after waiting one hour after time fixed by law, plaintiff demanded a jury, a venire facias was issued, a jury summoned who were examined and sworn, and having heard the evidence by plaintiffs, returned a verdict for plaintiffs for one hundred and forty-two dollars and five cents damages, for which the justice rendered judgment. There is no record of the issuance of an execution. The next thing we find in the record is the following notice and service thereof: “To Harrison Blair, Anderson Blair, Melvin Blair, John A. Blair, Henry Blair, Octavia Brewer, Elizabeth Evans, Jane McCoy, Josephine Dingess, Hiram Dempsey, John Dempsey, James Dempsey, Lewis Dempsey, Joseph Dempsey, Estella Thompson, and Melvin Vinson, J oseph Vinson, Wil
“You and each of you will take notice, that on the 29th day of June, 1894, at the office of EL P. Clark, a justice of the peace within and for the county of -Logan and State of West Yirginia, at the forks of the Laurel Fork of Pigeon Creek, in Hardee district, of said county, at the hour of 11 o’clock, A.M., I will move said justice to quash an execution issued by him on the 11th day of May, 1894, against me as late sheriff of said county, and in your favor in the name of Harrison Blair, Sr., and John Blair’s heirs, for the sum of-one hundred and forty-two dollars and five cents, with interest thereon from the 12th day of January, 1894, until paid, and eleven dollars and five cents costs; which said execution is issued on a judgment obtained by you before said justice on the 12th day of January, aforesaid, and is returnable within sixty days from its date, and is now in the hands of L. M. Mitchell, a constable of said county, for collection, for the following reasons, to-wit:
1st — That said justice was entirley without jurisdiction to render said judgment, because the plaintiffs were not properly before the court; said justice having failed to appoint a guardian for the infant defendants in said action, before the summons issued therein, or at any time before said judgment, as is required in section 24 of chapter 50 of the Code; there being no other manner in which infants can sue before justices.
2nd — That said judgment rested upon no cause of action whatever.
And therefore said judgment is void and the execution thereon should be quashed by said justice.
Respectfully, &c.,
JaMes R. HENDERSON,
By Counsel, J. E. PecK, Je., Atty.
I accept service for the within named defendant, H. Blair & ais. June 18, 1894. H. K. ShuMATE.”
A memorandum in the record shows that the execution mentioned in the notice was not among the papers. The parties appeared, and the matter was continued from time to time until the 5th of August, 1894, and the justice refused to quash the execution, from which judgment of the justice defendant Henderson appealed to the circuit court of Logan County. On the
“First — The action was not brought in the manner prescribed by statute for infant plaintiffs to sue before a justice; nor in substantial compliance therewith.
Second> — The justice refused to dismiss the plaintiff’s action on the return day of the summons therein, the plaintiffs having failed to file their complaint on said day, and the defendant being present and demanding said dismissal.
Third — There was no issue of fact, or matter in controversy to be tried by a jury.”
Section 24, chapter 50, Code, prescribes how an action shall be brought on behalf of an infant, the object of which statute is protection of the rights of the defendant in the matter of costs in ease the plaintiff fails in his action, that he may have some responsible person to look to. This suit was brought by the adult plaintiffs in their own names, and by the infant plaintiffs by their next friend, one of the adult plaintiffs, he thereby assuming liability for the costs in ease of failure in the action. Defendant’s proper defense for defect in the summons was to appear specially for the'purpose alone, so stating at the time of making the motion, of quashing the summons, before making a general appearance. Buckingham v. McLean, 13 How. 150; Bank v. Bank, 3 W. Va. 386; Mahany v. Kephart, 15 W. Va. 609; Blankenship v. Railroad Co., 43 W. Va. 135. “A general appearance is a waiver of the want of notice.” Farrer & Brown v. U. S., 3 Peters 459. “The decisions of this Court have uniformly been, that an appearance cures any defects in the form of process.” Williams and Keys v. Campbell, 1 Wash (Va.) 153; Gracie v. Palmer, 8 Wheat. 699; Pollard v. Dwight, 4 Cranch 428. On the return day of the summons defendant appeared “and made a motion to quash the papers on the grounds that plaintiff had failed to file his complaint in this action upon return day of the summons.” What “papers” were to be quashed is not stated, there is no direct motion to quash the summons.
Defendant in his brief says, “We do not wish to reverse the circuit court upon this technical point, fatal though it is, but on the merits of the case,” then proceeds to state that the action was founded on the last half of section 24, chapter 30, Code. I can only say in reply to this there is nothing in the record to indicate upon what the action is founded, except the summons, which cites the defendant to answer the plaintiffs “in a civil action for the recovery of money due for damages for a wrong.” The bill of particulars or complaint which is shown to have been filed by the justice, is not brought up in the record. A motion to quash an execution issued upon a void judgment is a proper proceeding, but not if issued upon an erroneous judgment. The judgment of the circuit court will be affirmed.
Affirmed.