71 Me. 276 | Me. | 1880
The writ used for bringing this suit, was originally dated December 3, 18.77, returnable at the next January term of the superior court, and was delivered to an officer, who made return of personal service, and a nominal attachment of property thereon.
Subsequently, discovering it is said that there was no attachment of real estate, and for the purpose of making one, before entry the attorney for the plaintiff caused the date and the return day to be changed, and a new service to be made by an attachment of real estate and by giving a new summons to the defendant. The writ so changed was entered by leave of court on the second day of the February term, to which it was returnable, and on the eleventh day of the term the defendant moved to dismiss.
The question is raised whether after service on the defendant such a change of the writ and new service were authorized.
From the fact that in trustee proeess, a proceeding somewhat similar is expressly permitted, no implication can arise that it is allowed in cases to which that statute does not apply. The inference rather is, that the statute was required in order to warrant such a use of the writ, and that it therefore has no
The writ issues from court, and is returnable thereto, authorizing in the meantime property to be attached, and the defendant to be summoned. When this has been done, the writ has performed its office and should be returned. There should be no change in it, after such service, except by leave of court. "The writ, when served, must be returned into the court by the officer who makes the service. Neither- he nor the attorney who gave it to him, can alter or add to it.” Brigham v. Este, 2 Pick. 424.
The cases cited from Massachusetts, Gardner v. Webber, and Parkman v. Crosby, 16 Pick. 251 and 297, go no further than to hold that after an attachment of property, and before service on the defendant, a change of the date and return day may sometimes be permitted, upon the ground of a long established practice in that State, with which the court in its discretion declined to interfere, not perceiving that it was liable to abuse, and holding that if a new rule of practice were to be established it ought not to act retrospectively. Such a practice continued for a long time may properly be regarded as having had the sanction of the court.
Whatever may be the practice in this respect, in this State, it is clear that the cases cited afford no authority for a change in the writ after if has been served on the defendant. There is in Massachusetts, a'precedent for an indictment against a justice of the peace for altering a writ after service, and before the return day, which apparently failed only for want of technical precision in its averments. Comm. v. Mycall, 2 Mass. 136. While from the later decisions of Brown v. Neal, 3 Allen, 74, and Simeon v. Cramm, 121 Mass. 492, it is clear that alterations of the writ after personal service would not be allowed in that State.
The court in New Hampshire, with greater strictness, refuses to allow a writ which has been serwed by an attachment of real estate, even if there has been no service on the defendant, to be used to commence a new action of later date between the same parties. Parsons v. Shorey, 48 N. H. 550.
There is a series of decisions in New Hampshire, directed against changes in mesne process, after service has once begun by attachment of property, or even against its use for another action between other parties, after it has once been filled, ready for service. But they serve our present purpose only so far as they tend very strongly against allowing changes .to be made in the writ after it has been served on the defendant. Dearborn v. Twist, 6 N. H. 44; Lovell v. Sabin, 15 N. H. 37; Lyford v. Bryant, 38 N. H. 89; Eastman v. Morrison, 46 N. H. 136. The attorney may alter the test and return of a writ before it has been served. Sloan v. Wattles, 13 Johns. 158; Sullivan v. Alexander, 18 Johns. 3.
But while the change in the date and return day of the present writ, after service, was irregular, the only remedy for the defendant was by plea or motion in abatement. It is a matter which touches only the present proceeding, and does not affect the merits, or show that the plaintiff is concluded. So far as any rights of the defendant grew out of the irregularity, it was competent for him to waive them, and under the rule of the superior court, which provides that all pleas or motions in abatement must be filed within two days after the entry of the action, we think he did waive them by neglecting till the eleventh day of the term to file his motion to dismiss. There is no averment that the facts were first discovered after the usual time for filing pleas
Nor does it change the result that only a special appearance was entered. "If the time allowed for filing the motion is permitted to pass without doing so, it is as much a waiver as if the appearance had been general. It is a neglect to do that without which the objection becomes of no avail.” Richardson v. Rich, 66 Maine, 249, and cases cited.
It may well be doubted whether, as the case is presented, a plea in abatement, rather than a motion, was not in this instance necessary. It is not alleged in the motion that all the facts appeared upon inspection of the record. The record might show changes and erasures, but it is no where alleged that it would exhibit the state of facts set forth in the motion. Certainly such changes might be made so carefully as not to appear in full upon the face of the papers.
Whatever rights accrued to the defendant from any illegality in the use of the process, having been waived by a failure on his part to observe the rule of court in the time of filing his plea or motion, it remains only to inquire whether the irregularity is of such a character that the court of its own motion will refuse to regard the process as valid, and will interpose to stay further proceedings upon it. It is clear that there may be an abuse of mesne process such that, if both parties assent, it cannot receive the aid or sanction of the court. It is clear, on the contrary, that not every irregularity would be treated as ground for summarily dismissing the action. The whole subject, in eases like this, where the defendant has not put himself in position to claim a legal right in regard to it, must be referred to the discretionary power of the court, to determine in each instance, as in the allowance of amendments, what the due course of legal administration requires ; whether the irregularity is so injurious in its cifect upon the case at bar, or so dangerous as a precedent, as to render it an abuse requiring correction.
The motion to dismiss is overruled and by agreement of counsel, in that event, the entry was to be,
Defendant defaulted.