246 S.W. 1111 | Tex. App. | 1923
This is a writ of error from a judgment by default rendered in favor of defendant in error and against plaintiff in error in the sum of $2,500. The suit was for damages alleged to have accrued to defendant in error through the negligence of plaintiff in driving a motor truck into him while he was riding on a bicycle along Santa Rosa avenue in the city of San Antonio, near the intersection of the street named with West Commerce street. The citation was directed to the Houshold Furniture Company, and the return is as follows:
"Came to hand 1st day of October, A.D. 1921, at 9:00 o'clock a. m. and executed 1st day of October, A.D. 1921, in San Antonio, Bexar county, Texas, at 10:40 o'clock a m. by delivering to Household Furniture Company by serving Mr. Lockhart, who accepted service for James Kapp, president, in person, a true copy of this citation."
The judgment recites that plaintiff in error was duly cited but made default.
In the citation the sheriff or constable was directed to summon the Household Furniture Company to appear before a certain court on the first Monday in October, 1921, and near the close of the writ the officer is commanded to deliver it to plaintiff in error, by serving James Kapp, president, in person, with a true copy of the writ. The petition alleged that "`Mr. James Kapp is president and upon whom service of process in this cause may be had." The service is assailed on the grounds that the return fails to show that the citation was delivered to the president, the secretary or treasurer of the corporation, or to a local agent, or that a copy of the citation was left at the principal office of the company during office hours as required by the statute. There are three ways in which a corporation may be served with citation: First, upon the president, secretary, or treasurer of the company; second, upon the local agent representing such company in the county in which the suit is brought; and, third, by leaving a copy of the citation at the principal office of the company during office hours. Vernon's Sayles' Civil Statutes, art. 1860. The return of the officer in this case fails to show that the citation was served on the president, secretary, or treasurer of the company, or that it was served on a local agent of the company, or that a copy of it was left at the principal office of the company during office hours. The return affirmatively shows that the citation was not served in either of the three ways prescribed by statute, but that it was served upon "Mr. Lockhart who accepted service for James Kapp, president, in person." Who "Mr. Lockhart" I may be is not disclosed by the record, nor is any effort made to show his authority for accepting service for the president of the company; nor is it shown where this Mr. lockhart was when he undertook to represent the president of the company. There can be no doubt that to authorize a judgment by default the sheriff's return must show that the citation was served by one of the *1112
methods named in the statute, and this must appear even though the judgment recites that the defendant was duly served. Roberts v. Stockslager,
"The provisions of the statute, as to the mode of service, and the fullness of the return, are as plain, as they are imperative. They cannot be mistaken; and the courts should not permit them to be disregarded. They prescribe the mode by which the court acquires jurisdiction over the person of the defendant; and as this is necessary to give validity to its acts and judgments, the regulations * * * should be strictly observed by the officers charged with the duty, and enforced by the tribunal before which the matters in controversy are to be determined."
That has been an expression of the law of Texas for over 70 years, and it has never been questioned or limited in any manner.
Defendant in error admits in effect that the return does not show service of the citation as required by statute, but argues that this court should presume that the trial court heard testimony which proved that the citation was served on an officer of the corporation. To sustain this contention appellee cites the cases of Railway v. Wells (Tex. Civ. App.)
In this case the citation commanded service on the corporation through its president, Kapp, and the return showed that the service was not made on Kapp or any other officer or agent of the corporation. Lockhart is not described as an officer or agent of the corporation, but seems to have assumed the role of an agent for Kapp. Such service is not sustained by any decision to which our attention has been called, and certainly is not sustained by the statute. This court will not indulge in the presumption that the court ascertained that a person who was not served at all with citation was the agent of the company and that there was therefore proper service on plaintiff in error.
The judgment is reversed, and the cause remanded.