HENRIETTA DEBOER, APPELLANT, v. ERNEST FATTOR, RESPONDENT.
No. 3930
Supreme Court of Nevada
December 12, 1956
Petition for rehearing denied February 7, 1957.
304 P.2d 958
Woodburn, Forman, Wedge, Blakey and Thompson, of Reno, for Respondent.
OPINION
By the Court, BADT, J.:
This appeal presents for our determination the question whether plaintiff‘s action was commenced within the statutory two-year limitation on an action for damages caused by the defendant‘s wrongful act. Section
The personal injuries occurred May 22, 1952, and the cause of action would, accordingly, be barred after May 22, 1954. The complaint was filed May 12, 1954, on which date the clerk signed and sealed the summons and handed it to plaintiff‘s attorney, who in turn delivered it to the sheriff for service August 9, 1954.
Appellant contends that the rule under
We turn to the rules and note first
Chapter II is entitled in part “Commencement of action; service of process“, and
The notes of the “Advisory Committee to the Supreme Court of Nevada, on Rules of Civil Procedure“, remark that the rules are modelled after, and numbered in accordance with, the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure and comment on
”
The Advisory Committee‘s notes as to
The parties appear to be in accord on two things, first, that the Advisory Committee‘s notes should be considered as an expression by this court, and, secondly, that the Committee‘s reference to preserving “the present Nevada rule” means the rule as applied in Woodstock v. Whitaker.
Appellant‘s contention is that, reading and considering
We are of the opinion that the Nevada Rules of Civil Procedure imbed more firmly than ever the rule enunciated in Woodstock v. Whitaker.
Such so-called second “class” of cases, and any reliance thereon, was entirely unnecessary to the decision. The first positive holding that “issuance” included the necessary delivery to the sheriff, or other qualified person, for service, followed by the repeated holding at the end of the opinion that the action “was commenced May 21, 1942, because that was the date the summons was placed in the hands of the sheriff for service“, definitely indicates the real holding in the case. That the decision may be further fortified for other reasons does not, in our opinion, weaken that holding.3 The contention that the delivery of the signed and sealed summons by the clerk to plaintiff‘s attorney constituted an issuance of the summons, and, therefore, a commencement of the action, under the so-called second class of cases, is rejected.
Judgment affirmed.
MERRILL, C. J., concurring:
I concur, but under the circumstances of this case, feel that an apologetic footnote might well be added.
In the light of the explanatory note to
However, should such an attorney do what we “say” (that is follow
Failure to comply with the rule of Woodstock v. Whitaker cannot, then, be attributed to the language in which
We cannot, of course, condone a disregard of our case
EATHER, J., dissenting:
I dissent. I would hold that suit had been commenced within the statutory period; that summary judgment should be set aside and the matter remanded for further proceedings.
As was recently stated in Lewis v. Neblett, ....Cal.App.2d...., 302 P.2d 859, 863, “Statutes of limitation are ‘intended to run against those who are neglectful of their rights, and who fail to use reasonable and proper diligence in the enforcement thereof‘.” (Citing Neff v. New York Life Insurance Co., 30 Cal.2d. 165, 180 P.2d 900, 171 A.L.R. 563.)
In the case at bar it cannot be said that appellant has been neglectful of his rights or failed to use reasonable or proper diligence. On the contrary, as concerns service of process, the record demonstrates the utmost good faith in attempts to make prompt service. After receiving summons from the clerk, appellant‘s counsel (1) conferred with the sheriff with reference to service and did not deliver summons to the sheriff for the reason that counsel did not know where the defendant might be served; (2) checked the Reno police department report of the collision out of which the cause of action arose; (3) made further inquiry at the Reno police station as to the address or whereabouts of the defendant; (4) checked the records of the safety responsibility division of the Nevada Public Service Commission; (5) checked the Reno telephone directory; (6) checked the Reno city directory; (7) made inquiry from the defendant‘s attorney; (8) when the defendant‘s whereabouts were learned, accomplished service forthwith.
It is my opinion that the majority of this court in that case was in error and that such error should now be corrected and the dissenting opinion recognized to be the rule of this state.
In the case at bar, delivery of summons to the attorney for the plaintiff should be held to constitute effective delivery to a person authorized to make service and thus complete the requirement of issuance of summons under Woodstock v. Whitaker.
Notes
Indeed, the use of the terms “issue“, “issuing” and “cause to be issued“, as used in
