69 P. 473 | Idaho | 1902
— This action was commenced in the court below to obtain a judgment foreclosing certain mortgages. Two of the defendants did not appear in the action, and were not actually served with summons, but served by publication of sum - mons. The third and remaining defendant, A. E. Green, was served with summons in Idaho county. Said defendant Green appeared specially for the purpose of moving to quash the return of the sheriff of Idaho county showing service of the summons upon him, and in support of said motion filed his affidavit to the effect that no copy of the complaint was served upon him with a copy of the said summons. The sheriff’s return shows that he served, with a copy of the summons, a copy of the complaint in the action. It is made to appear by affidavit that a paper purporting to be a copy of the complaint in the action was served upon said defendant Green with a copy of the summons, and the plaintiff, upon making such showing, asked for an order directing and requiring said defendant Green to present to the court the said paper purporting to be a copy of the complaint in the action. This the said defendant Green failed and refused to do. The trial court refused to make the order demanded quashing the return upon said summons, and this action of the court is one of the errors
The principal error assigned, and the one which is mainly relied upon by the appellant for reversal in this case, is that the affidavit showing publication of summons is insufficient, and does not show that the summons was published, as required by the order for publication, for the length of time required by said order and by the statute. The said affidavit shows that the summons was published in the paper designated by the order for publication five times, the first issue being on the eighteenth day of July, 1901, and the last issue on the fifteenth day of August, 1901; and that the summons was published in the newspaper proper, not in any supplement thereof. It is thus made to appear that the said publication of summons was made in five consecutive issues of the proper weekly newspaper. Appellant contends that this was not for a sufficient length of time; that from the eighteenth day of July, to the fifteenth day of August following, is less than one calendar month, and that such publication did not answer the requirements of section 4146 of the Revised Statutes. The month mentioned in said statutes is a calendar month, and not a lunar month. Under the contention of the appellant the publication of the summons in said paper was made for twenty-nine dajrs only — less tha.-n a month. This presupposes that the last issue of the paper, unlike the preceding four issues, answered for only one day. That contention is incorrect. Appellant cites us to the decision in Strode v. Strode, 6 Idaho, 67, 96 Am. St. Rep. 349, 53 Pac. 163, as supporting his contention, but, in our view, nothing said in that decision has any application to the question before us here. This question was inferentially and indirectly before this court in the case of Bowen v. Harper, 6 Idaho, 654, 59 Pac. 179. In that case an order for publication of summons was procured, after which, instead of publishing the summons, the plaintiff caused the summons to be personally served out of this state, and in the state of Illinois, on the twenty-first day of February, 1898. Thereafter, and on April 19, 1898, a default of .said absent defendant was entered, and six days after entry
The appeal is from the judgment upon the judgment-roll, and, finding no error in the record, the judgment is affirmed. Costs awarded to respondents.