89 Iowa 521 | Iowa | 1893
“Any applicant for damages claimed to be caused by the establishment of any highway, may appeal from the final decision of the board of supervisors to the circuit (district) court of the county in which the land lies; but notice of such appeal must be served on the county auditor within twenty days after the decision is made. If the highway has been established on condition that the petitioner therefor pay the damages, such notice shall be served on the four persons first named in the petition for the highway, if there are that many who reside in the county.”
“I hereby certify and return that this notice came into my hands September 22, 1891, and on September 24, 1891,1 served the same personally on J. A. Baitsell, Ed. Carpenter, and Daniel Monk, by reading the same to them, and delivering to them a true copy thereof. Said defendant C. D. Randall not being found, I served the same by leaving a copy hereof with Sarah Randall, a member of his family over fourteen years of age, at his last and usual place of residence, in Mahaska county, Iowa, September 24, 1891.”
It will be observed that the service on C. D. Randall was not made upon him personally but by leaving a copy with his wife. The court below was of the opinion that said service was not sufficient. The statute does not authorize service in that manner. When service is required, it means personal service. There is no authority for adopting the substituted service provided for in the service of an original notice in that action.
It is. true that Randall learned of the fact very shortly, after the notice was left with his wife, and he appeared in the district court, and joined with the other petitioners in a motion that the appeal be dismissed because there was no proper service of the notice of the appeal on him. An appearance for the purpose of objecting to the jurisdiction of the court because the notice of the appeal was not served within the time required by statute did not confer jurisdiction. Spurrier v. Wirtner, 48 Iowa, 486, 487. In Brydolf v. Wolf, 32 Iowa, 509, it was held that a service of an original notice on the wife of one of the partners of the firm is not sufficient as a service on the firm. The same rule should apply in a case like this. The first four persons
There is nothing in the views above expressed inconsistent with the opinion in the case of Brown v. Petrie, 86 Iowa, 581. That was. a proceeding before the township trustees to apportion the parts of a division fence that the plaintiff and the defendant should build and maintain. The service of the notice of the proceeding was made on the defendant’s wife. The award of the board was made, and the defendant complied, mainly, therewith, and built nearly all of the part of the fence assigned to him; and, when an action was brought to recover for the small part not built by the defendant, it was held that, as there was no direct attack on the award, the defendant would not be permitted to question it, without showing that' he had no knowledge of the proceeding. It will be observed that the notice required in that case was in the nature of a notice in an original action, or rather in a special proceeding. In the case at bar, as we have said, the record should show on its face that an appeal was taken.