123 P. 621 | Utah | 1912
The plaintiff filed an original application in this court for a writ of prohibition to prevent the Honorable F. C. Loof-bourow, 'as judge of the district court of Salt Lake Cbunty, Utah, from entertaining, an appeal from a judgment entered in the justice court of Murray City, in a certain action wherein William E. Forsythe was plaintiff and Neal McMillan was defendant, and to prevent said court from trying said case on appeal.
The controlling facts, briefly stated, are as follows: The plaintiff, Forsythe, on the 9th day of February, 1907, commenced an action in the justice court of Murray City before one Charles F. Durand, justice of the peace, against the defendant Neal McMillan. The defendant McMillan, for reasons not material here, was adjudged in default, and judgment by default was entered against him in said justice court on the 11th day of March, 1907. McMillan was not aware that judgment had been entered against him in said action until the 10th day of July, 1910; and as soon as he became aware of the fact he at once sued out a writ of certiorari in the district court of Salt Lake County against Charles F. Durand to review the proceedings had in said action, and to annul said judgment entered against him by default, as aforesaid, upon the ground that said justice had exceeded his jurisdiction in entering said judgment. Upon a hearing of the certiorari proceeding by the district court, said court refused to annul said judgment, but affirmed the same. McMillan appealed from the decision of the district court, affirming the justices judgment to this court, and after a
We have a statute (Comp. Laws 1907, section 3744) which requires that notice of the entry of judgment be given to the losing party before his time for taking an appeal from a judgment rendered in a justice court begins to run. The-statute, among other things, provides that an appeal may be taken from ¡a justice court to the district court at any time within thirty days after the rendition of any final judgment in the justice court. That portion of the statute which is deemed controlling here reads as follows:
“Notice of the entry of judgment must be given to the losing party by the successful party either personally or by publication, and the time of appeal shall date from the service of such notice.”
There are other provisions; but they relate to the publication of notice in case personal service cannot be had. In this case, personal service of notice.could have been had; and hence the remaining portions of the statute are not material.
As we have seen, the original action against the defendant McMillan was commenced in February, 1907, and final judgment by default was entered against him therein on the 11th day of March following; but no notice of the entry of such judgment was given him by the 10th day of July, 1910, at which time he in some way became apprised of the judgment, and then immediately commenced the certiorari proceeding to review the proceedings and annul the judgment before referred to. While the certiorari proceeding was pending in this court on appeal, the plaintiff, in the case of Forsythe v. McMillan, served notice of the entry of judgment in the justice court upon the defendant McMillan, and within thirty days thereafter McMillan served his notice of appeal, attempting-thereby to appeal said action to the district court of Salt Lake-County. The district court, over plaintiff’s objection, entertained said appeal, and he alleges in his application that, unless prohibited, said court will try said case upon its merits
ing to annul the judgment from which an appeal is ■sought, the defendant McMillan waived his right to have the notice of the entry of judgment served upon him; and that the time for taking an appeal commenced to run from the time he commenced his certiorari proceeding to cancel the very judgment from which he now seeks to prosecute an appeal. Upon the other hand, counsel for McMillan, in their brief, state the proposition involved here in the following words: “There is but one question in this prohibition proceeding, viz.: Was the bringing of said certiorari by Neal McMillan such an act on his part as becomes, in law, a waiver •of the notice of judgment required by section 3144 ?” In answer to their own proposition, coimsel contend that the ■certiorari proceeding was not a direct attack upon the judgment sought to be reviewed and annulled; and hence they assert that it cannot be successfully claimed that McMillan waived the service of notice of the entry of said judgment; and, further, that his time for appeal did not begin to run until the notice was served by plaintiff, Forsythe. We have had occasion to construe and apply the provisions of section 3144, sufra, with respect to whether a losing party may waive the service of notice of entry of judgment provided for therein, and have also determined under what circumstances such a waiver may be implied. See State v. District Court, 38 Utah, 138, 110 Pac. 981. We there held that the losing party may waive the service of notice upon him by his own act. Mr. Justice McCarty, in the course of the opinion, said:
“Where, for example, a party dissatisfied with, the judgment files a motion for a stay of execution, or by other direct proceeding attacks the judgment and invokes the action of the court to relieve him, either wholly or' in part, from the effect thereof, he will be ■deemed to have waived service of notice.”
It is therefore ordered that the writ of prohibition issue as and for the purposes prayed for in plaintiff’s application.,