31 So. 2d 125 | Miss. | 1947
Allen brought suit in ejectment against Burns and procured judgment by default. Error is assigned that the summons, although served personally upon Burns, did not comply with asserted requirements of Code 1942, Section 789, which state that in ejectment cases "Declarations, writs, and pleas in the form or to the effect of the precedents appended hereto, shall be good and sufficient for all purposes in proceedings under this chapter." Section 791 provides a form of summons which adds to the ordinary writ at law, the following "to answer the *243 complaint of A B, who demands of him the possession of [describe the land as in the declaration]; and in default of his appearing and defending this action, judgment will be entered against him, and he will be turned out of possession of said land; . . ."
Section 786 provides: "On filing the declaration, a summons shall issue against the defendant, which shall be issued, executed, and returned in the manner prescribed for the issuance, execution, and return of a summons in personal actions; and the writ may issue to any county."
Inasmuch as Section 786 refers only to the manner of issuance, execution and return, it does not impair the propriety or purpose of Sections 789 and 791. All of these sections were enacted together in the Code of 1857, Ch. 55, Art. 35.
If it was the purpose of the Legislature to abrogate the requirements of the common law, it must be held to have retained so much thereof as is not specifically dispensed with. The ancient fictions which cumbered the former proceedings were abolished by the Code of 1857. Formerly a copy of the declaration was served upon the opposite party, the fictions of a casual ejector and the consent rule making such procedure appropriate.
It must have been intended by the statutory forms to indicate the extent to which recession from the common law should be conceded. That writs "in the form or to the effect of," Section 789, "shall be good and sufficient" clearly indicates that any further and substantial withdrawal therefrom shall be less than sufficient. In lieu of the complete information contained in a copy of the declaration, there was substituted a description of the nature of the action and the penalty upon default. To ignore this deliberate enactment is to charge the Legislature of 1857, and of each succeeding body by which subsequent codes were adopted, with folly. The entire chapter upon Ejectment, Title 7, Code 1942, is complete in itself and is almost completely the same as that *244 enacted ninety years ago. It may be that greater freedom from codal shackles could be gained by casting the action in other legal or equitable forms. But when availing of this chapter, it must be taken as it is.
Appellee cites Guess v. Smith,
In the instant case, the nature of the action is not only to be inserted "with authority of law," but under legal requirement. The action and its procedure, even in its abridged form, is sui generis. "Under the ancient practice it was necessary that the nature and contents of the declaration should be explained at the time to the person to whom it was delivered and courts would closely scrutinize the method of service to ascertain if a proper delivery had been made." Warvelle on Ejectment, Section 82, (1905); Jackson v. Stiles, 1 Cow., N.Y., 222. In the older forms even after abolition of fictions, the notice to the defendant which was separate from the declaration, disclosed the nature and purpose of the action. Adams on Ejectment, p. 421 (1840). Section 791 retains this remnant of the older requirement.
In Ahlemeyer v. Miller,
If we were disposed to support our interpretation of the statute by considerations of general judicial policy, justification for setting aside the default judgment could be found in the reasoning of Field v. Junkin,
It is further worthy of notice that the summons not only omitted to inform defendant of the nature and incidents of the suit but, by utilizing a printed general form applicable to money demands, incorrectly advised the defendant only that "The amount demanded in this suit is the sum stated in the declaration and lawful interest and costs."
Reversed and remanded. *246