29 N.W.2d 436 | Minn. | 1947
According to the allegations of the complaint, Herman Buhler, a resident of Ramsey county, Minnesota, died testate in December 1945, naming his son, defendant Harold Buhler (hereinafter referred to as Buhler), a resident of California, as residuary devisee and legatee in his will. Defendant Thomas J. Nash was appointed executor of decedent's will in April 1946. The only property decedent had at the time of his death was his homestead in St. Paul, Minnesota, the real estate described in the complaint. The complaint alleged that in May 1946 Buhler executed a quitclaim deed to the property. Thereafter, in August 1946, this action was commenced, at which time the estate of decedent was still in the process of probate in Ramsey county. Plaintiff claimed that decedent was indebted to her for services rendered as a servant in his household in the sum of $920. Plaintiff did not file a claim in probate court, but commenced this action against Nash as executor and Buhler. On or about the date of the commencement of this action, the sheriff of Ramsey county made his return of "not found" as to Buhler. A few days afterward, plaintiff's attorney filed an affidavit for publication and obtained an order of the district court directing that service of the summons might be obtained by publishing the same in a St. Paul legal newspaper or by obtaining personal service of the summons outside the state upon Buhler. At the same time the attorney mailed a copy of the summons and complaint to Harold at his last-known address in California. On September 10, 1946, the sheriff of San Francisco county, California, made his return of "not found" as to Buhler, and thereafter the summons was published *573 in a St. Paul legal newspaper. Buhler appeared specially in district court, by his attorneys, and objected to the jurisdiction of the court. This appearance was overruled, and he was given time to answer the complaint. He assigns as error the order of the trial court overruling his special appearance objecting to the jurisdiction of the court.
The questions for determination are:
(1) Was the order of the trial court appealable?
(2) Has jurisdiction by the publication of the summons been obtained as to Buhler, a nonresident?
1. We hold that the order is appealable. It is an order denying the motion of Buhler appearing specially for the purpose of objecting to the jurisdiction of the court on the ground that he is a nonresident and that the court has not acquired jurisdiction over him or over the property described in the complaint. It gave him time to answer the complaint, thus determining his legal rights with reference to the jurisdictional matter, and required him to defend the action on the merits, based on the assumption by the court that it had jurisdiction over him.
In Piano Mfg. Co. v. Kaufert,
2. Has jurisdiction by the publication of the summons been obtained as to Buhler, a nonresident? In determining this, we must first consider whether this is an action in personam or one in rem so far as Buhler, the nonresident, is concerned. He contends that this is an action in personam, that no property belonging to him has been seized, and that therefore, being a nonresident, no jurisdiction was obtained over him. The trial court was of the opinion that it was an action in rem. It also reasoned that if plaintiff had attached the homestead there probably would have been no dispute that jurisdiction by publication could have been obtained, but it was of the opinion that it was not necessary to attach. It further said in part in its memorandum:
"* * * In effect, this is a proceeding for the establishment and enforcement of a lien upon the property described in the complaint which, because it was the homestead of the deceased was not, generally speaking, a part of his estate but nonetheless was subject to the payment of plaintiff's claim. It seems to the court that a description of the property intended to be charged with the amount of the claim is such a 'seizure' of the property as brings it within the jurisdiction of the court and makes the action one in rem.
"The court is of the opinion that its jurisdiction is within the purview of Minnesota Statutes 1945, Section
Minn. Const. art.
"* * * A reasonable amount of property shall be exempt from seizure or sale for the payment of any debt or liability. The amount of such exemption shall be determined by law.Provided, however, that all property so exempted shall be liable to seizure and sale for any debts incurred to any person for work done or materials furnished in the construction, repair or improvement of the same, and provided further, that such liability to seizure and sale shall also extend to all real property for any debt incurred to any laborer or servant for labor or service performed."
This provision of the constitution does not automatically create a lien for indebtedness in the classes referred to therein, as in the instant *575
case, for labor or services performed. It provides only that the property which otherwise would have been exempt shall be liable to seizure and sale or such debts. In Nickerson v. Crawford,
"* * * But the constitution furnishes no basis for any such claim. It does not make the specified debts a lien on the property, but merely provides that the otherwise exempt property shall be subject to seizure and sale for such debts. They may be a lien under some statute, but, so far as the constitution is concerned, debts of the enumerated classes only become liens on a homestead when reduced to judgment and docketed; and then they become liens on the homestead, the same as on any other real estate of the debtor."
See, also, Hasey v. McMullen,
We believe that this action is one in personam. The district court had no power to make plaintiff's claim for services a lien on the premises, except to the extent that upon proper proof it could order the entry of judgment in favor of plaintiff for personal services rendered. This judgment, when docketed, would of course become a lien on all real estate owned as of that time by the person against whom the judgment was rendered. M.S.A. §
M.S.A. §
In practice, the word "seizure" is defined in 3 Bouvier, Law Dictionary (3 Rev.) 3037, as follows:
"The act of taking possession of the property of a person condemned by the judgment of a competent tribunal to pay a certain sum of money, by a sheriff, constable, or other officer lawfully authorized thereto, by virtue of an execution, for the purpose of having such property sold according to law to satisfy the judgment."
Black, Law Dictionary (3 ed.) 1598, defines the word "seizure" in practice as follows:
"The act performed by an officer of the law, under the authority and exigence of a writ, in taking into the custody of the law the property, real or personal, of a person against whom the judgment *577 of a competent court has passed, condemning him to pay a certain sum of money, in order that such property may be sold, by authority and due course of law, to satisfy the judgment."
According to 38 Wd. Phr. (Perm. ed.) 525, "The legal definition of the word 'seizure' is the taking possession of property by an officer."
The question here, as it appears to us, is whether the description of the property in the summons and complaint constituted such a seizure of the property as to give the court jurisdiction, as contemplated by §
In Cabanne v. Graf,
"The state has plenary jurisdiction over all property, real or personal, within its limits, and may seize and subject it to the payment of the debts of the owners thereof, whether citizens of the state or not, upon such reasonable notice as the legislature may prescribe. *578
But the power of the state personally to affect, by the judgments of its courts, citizens of another state, without personal service of process upon them within the state, is quite another matter. Prior to the decision in the case of Pennoyer v. Neff,
"Pennoyer v. Neff is the leading authority in support of the now well-settled proposition that, except as to proceedings affecting the personal status of the plaintiff, or in rem, or as to actions to enforce liens, or to quiet title, or to recover possession of property, or for the partition thereof, or to set aside fraudulent transfers thereof, or to obtain judgment enforceable against property seized by attachment or other process, no state can authorize its courts to compel a citizen of another state remaining therein to come before them and submit to their decision a mere claim upon him for a money demand, no matter what the prescribed mode of service of process against him may be. An attempt to do so is not due process of law. 2 Freeman, Judgm. §§ 564-567; Hart v. Sansom,
In Cousins v. Alworth,
"An action against a non-resident, although in form inpersonam, is in effect in rem, and it is only by attaching property that the court acquires jurisdiction to further proceed, and then only to the extent of the property attached. Kenney v. Goergen,
In Kenney v. Goergen,
"Appellant cites numerous authorities to the effect that, where a defendant is a non-resident who has not been served with process, and who has not appeared in the action, it is the fact alone that he has property in the state subject to attachment that enables the court to obtain jurisdiction. This is elementary, * * * the mere existence of property within the state does not give the court jurisdiction. * * * and it is only by attaching the property that the court acquires jurisdiction, and then only to the extent of the property attached. If no property be found on which to levy, there is nothing to which the jurisdiction can attach, and the court could proceed no further."
The subject of the action was not the real estate described in the pleadings in the case at bar. The real subject of the action was to recover a judgment against the defendants, including Buhler, the nonresident. There was no seizure of property belonging to him in the state of Minnesota. We therefore hold that the trial court had no jurisdiction over Buhler, and his motion to dismiss should have been granted.
Reversed. *580