230 Mass. 254 | Mass. | 1918
By Common Law Rule 32 of the Supreme Judicial Court the plaintiff before taking out a writ of error is required to file the assignment of errors in the clerk’s office, a copy of which shall be inserted in the scire facias to be served on the defendant, and to which he is to plead within ten days after the return day unless the court shall by special order restrict or enlarge the time. While the record fails to show that a writ of scire facias issued, and the defendant’s plea was filed nearly a year after the entry of the petition, without any order of the court or consent of counsel for the plaintiff, the voluntary appearance by the defendant without objection is sufficient to confer jurisdiction.
The eight assignments are in legal intendment only different statements of the ground for reversal, that the service on the plaintiff of the writ in the original action was insufficient to give the trial court jurisdiction. The Pub. Sts. c. 161, § 31, in force when the service was made, provides, that “If the summons is not served personally on the defendant, the original or a copy, as the case may be, shall be left at bis last and usual place of abode, if he has any within the Commonwealth known to the officer; and if he has none, it shall be left with his tenant, agent, or attorney, if he has any within the Commonwealth. . . .”
The form of the return is left to the officer serving process. The only requirement is, that to be valid it must show substantial compliance with the statute. The writ described the defendant as a resident of Lynn, and the officer’s return states that after making a nominal attachment he, left the summons “ at his last and usual place of abode.” If the words ‘‘ known to me as such in said Lynn ” had been added the present case would be governed by Jones v. Walker, 15 Gray, 353, where the judgment was affirmed. But these words are a mere amplification. The only reasonable construction is, that the officer knew the facts to be as averred, and, as the defendant’s abode on the record was at the time in this Commonwealth, the return is to be read as unequivocally meaning the last and usual place of abode of the defendant in this Commonwealth known to the officer. And when so read it is sufficient to support the judgment. Smith v. Randall, 1 Allen, 456. Graves v. Cushman, 131 Mass. 359.
Judgment affirmed.