12 Colo. App. 220 | Colo. Ct. App. | 1898
On the 16th day of April, 1886, H.A.W. Tabor commenced his action in the district court of Arapahoe county for equitable relief against Rufus Clark and others, in which a writ of injunction was issued requiring them to refrain from the doing of certain acts. To procure the issuance of the writ, Tabor executed an undertaking, with J.J.B. DuBois as surety, conditioned for the payment to the defendants of all such costs and damages as should be awarded against the complainant, in case the injunction should be modified or dissolved, in whole or in part. In that suit judgment went against Tabor on the merits, and the injunction was dissolved. On the 1st day of December, 1886, Clark commenced his action in the same court against Tabor and DuBois, upon their undertaking. Summons was issued in the suit, upon which the following return appears: *222
"STATE OF COLORADO, } ss: "ARAPAHOE COUNTY,"I do hereby certify that I have duly executed the within summons on this 3d day of December, A.D. 1886, by personally delivering a copy of this writ, and also a copy of the complaint in this action, to each of the defendants, H.A.W. Tabor and J.J.B. DuBois, at Denver, county and state aforesaid.
"FREDERICK CRAMER, Sheriff, "By J.M. CHIVINGTON, Under Sheriff."Within the legal period, a demurrer was interposed to the complaint, which was signed Horace A.W. Tabor, J.J.B. DuBois, by A.B. Seaman, their attorney. Afterwards an answer was filed which was subscribed in the same manner. The plaintiff replied. The trial resulted in a judgment for the plaintiff, from which an appeal was taken to the supreme court, where it was reversed, and the cause remanded for a new trial. Tabor v. Clark,
The first question with which we are confronted, is whether, if the return of the sheriff was false, and was not the result of any misconduct of the plaintiff, its falsity may be shown by the party injured, in a proceeding to vacate the judgment. Undoubtedly, under the English common law, the rule which prevailed, was that, as between parties and privies, the return of the officer was conclusive, and that it could not be questioned except in an action against him for a false return. The English rule, with such modifications as difference in modes of procedure may have suggested, has been followed by many of the courts in this country. And so, taking into consideration the several modes in which valid service may be had, it has been held that the recital in the return, of matters presumptively within the personal knowledge of the officer, is conclusive as between the parties to the suit, unless the falsity of the return is disclosed by some other portion of the record; while, in a proper proceeding, the recital of matters not presumptively within the officer's personal knowledge, may be shown to be untrue. SeeHunter v. Stoneburner,
But, aside from all this, section 25 of the bill of rights provides that no person shall be deprived of life, liberty or, property, without due process of law. The legislature has prescribed the process necessary where life or liberty is involved, and it has also prescribed the process necessary to the rendition of judgments in civil actions, by means of which parties may be deprived of their property. The process prescribed is actual process, to be actually served, in some one of the methods specified. A person cannot be deprived of his life or liberty on a presumption, unless the presumption and the fact accord, and as, in respect to process, the constitution places life, liberty and property upon an equality, a party cannot be deprived of his property, without service of process in the manner provided by law. A presumption of service may or may not be true, and, if it is false, a judgment entered upon it, if it is enforced by execution, results in depriving the person who is the subject of the presumption, of his property without due process of law. We concede the force of precedents, and the respect which is due to them, but where gross injustice may follow adherence to a precedent, we do not conceive that it is binding upon courts, at least unless it is more generally concurred in than this, that the return by the sheriff of personal service of summons is conclusive upon the parties. And we do not conceive that any decision, except by the supreme court of our own state, would authorize us to place a construction upon the language of our constitution different from that which we believe it will bear.
But the courts are not agreed that the return, even if it recites personal service, is impervious to attack in a direct proceeding by the party upon whom the service purports to have been made, provided no rights of third persons have intervened. In Owen v. Ranstead,
But the record recites the appearance of BuBois to the suit by attorney, and the transcript shows that in the several stages of the case, attorneys did assume to represent him. He denies that they did so in pursuance of any authority from him, and it is quite clear from the corroborative affidavits *228
that Tabor employed the attorneys without consulting DuBois; that they, making no inquiry concerning the right of Tabor to employ them for the appellant, appeared for both defendants; that neither they nor Tabor had any conversation with DuBois concerning the suit during its pendency, and that their appearance for DuBois was inadvertence. What we have said on the question of the effect of a return of service of process when no service was in fact had, dispenses with the necessity of saying much upon the cognate question of the effect of a gratuitous appearance for a party who is ignorant of the existence of the suit in which the appearance is entered. According to the earlier English cases, a party was bound by the unauthorized appearance, and was left to his remedy against the officious attorney, unless the attorney was irresponsible so that the remedy against him would be valueless. But the doctrine was not strictly adhered to, even by the English courts, and has received, at the very most, only a partial recognition in this country. The whole question is elaborately discussed by Judge Dillon in Harshey v. Blackmarr,
The next question is whether relief can be obtained by a motion, entitled in the cause, and addressed to the court which rendered the judgment, or whether the party complaining must resort to bill in equity to set aside the judgment. In several of the cases which we have cited, it is held that a judgment rendered without jurisdiction of the person may be impeached in equity, especially where a showing is made that injustice would result from the enforcement of the judgment; and it has been decided by our own supreme court in *229 Wilson v. Hawthorne,
It is said, however, that DuBois is chargeable with laches in the bringing of his motion. Laches is a term of flexible import; and whether it exists in a given case or not, depends upon facts and circumstances peculiar to that case. It means something more than mere delay. Some other element must combine with the delay to constitute laches, and hence, in some cases, a party has been concluded by a delay of months or even weeks, while in others his rights have been held unaffected by a delay of years. The question ordinarily is whether during the period of delay, such changes have taken place in the position of parties, relative to the subject-matter of the litigation, as to render it inequitable to permit the enforcement of rights, concerning which otherwise there might be no difficulty. If while the injured party is unnecessarily inactive, interests of third persons have attached, or the other party, on the faith of an apparent situation, the reality of which he had no reason to doubt, has so changed his position that, if existing conditions were disturbed, he would suffer injury, the delay is chargeable as laches, and, in equity, the consequence of the laches is the loss of the remedy.
In this case, for aught that appears, the original judgment plaintiff is still the owner of the judgment; and there is nothing before us to indicate that it would be a hardship upon him to set the judgment aside, and allow the appellant to defend against the action; and, speaking with reference only to the record before us, the interval between the 13th day of December, 1895, the day of the rendition of the judgment, and the 6th day of August, 1896, the day of bringing the motion, a period of a little less than eight months, even if the appellant might have moved immediately upon entry of the judgment, cannot in our opinion be charged against him as laches. But if the appellant first received information of the existence of the judgment against him, in the latter part of July, 1896, then certainly no question can be made upon his diligence.
We are not advised of the ground upon which the court *232 denied the motion. If it was that the return of personal service by the sheriff could not be impeached by evidence dehors the record, it was erroneous, or if it was that the showing was insufficient, it was still erroneous. No objection was taken below to the nature of the evidence by which the motion was supported, and no counter-affidavits were filed; and while the appellee had the right to insist upon a searching investigation of the facts, and to demand the production of the witnesses in court, or before a referee, for oral examination and cross-examination, yet he could waive the right and the question of fact presented, could be determined upon affidavits. See Crosby v. Farmer, supra. The uncontradicted affidavits here were amply sufficient to require the setting aside of the judgment.
The effect of a vacation of the judgment will be simply to enable the appellant to exercise a right of which he was deprived. Of any connection with the proceeding of the sheriff, by which the court acquired an apparent jurisdiction of the appellant, the plaintiff was, to all appearances, entirely innocent, and he is entitled to an opportunity to establish his alleged cause of action against DuBois if he is able to do so.
The order denying the appellant's motion is reversed, and the cause remanded with instructions to the court below to hear the motion upon its merits, requiring the appellant, if the appellee shall so elect, to support, and allowing the appellee to resist, the motion, by the same kind of evidence that would be requisite if the relief were sought by bill in equity instead of motion; and, if the judgment shall be set aside, to permit the appellant to plead to the complaint, tendering issues of law or fact, or both, and make his defense to the action in the same manner in all respects as he might have done if he had been duly summoned at first. The nature or merits of the defense will not be considered by the court in hearing the motion. They will be investigated at the trial, if one shall be had. To warrant the vacation of the judgment, it will be necessary only for the court to find that the *233 summons was not in fact served, and that the appearance in the appellant's behalf was without authority.
Reversed.
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