1 Nev. 233 | Nev. | 1865
Opinion by
concurring.
The facts of this case are as follows: In 1860, Eichard Baffer & Co. were doing business as partners at Humbug,
To this complaint the defendant, Geller, demurred, within a few days after it was filed, on two grounds:
*236 First — That it did not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action.
Second — That it appeared on the face of the complaint that the claim was barred by the statute of limitations. The demurrer was overruled, and ten days .given defendant, Geller, to answer. Within the ten days he did file his answer, but failed to serve it on plaintiff’s attorneys. One of the plaintiff’s attorneys came in, and on an ex pa/rte affidavit that the answer had not been served on his firm, moved for judgment.
An order for judgment generally was made by the Judge, and the judgment was entered up on the 14th day of January, 1864, in favor of plaintiff, against the administrator, to be paid in due course of administration out of assets of deceased. Some eleven months after the judgment was entered, the defendant, Geller, moved to open the default, as it was termed, and set the judgment aside. This the Court refused' to do, and the defendant appeals to this Court from the judgment rendered in January, 1864. Several errors are assigned: That the claim was barred by the statute of limitations; that it was error to enter judgment with an answer on file; that the form of the judgment should have conformed to the prayer of the complaint, etc.
The point as to the statute of limitations we have not examined particularly, and therefore express no opinion on that point.
We think the point that no judgment should have been rendered while the answer remained on file and undisposed of, is well taken. The statute requires an answer to be filed and served; but it does not require that there should be any evidence of service on the answer. In this respect it is very different from a complaint. The complaint must be served, unless service be waived, and proper evidence of that service, .or waiver of service, brought before the Court before it will assume jurisdiction of the defendant. But when defendant has, filed his answer, the Court has jurisdiction of the person, and no evidence of service of the answer is necessary to enable the Court to exercise all its powers over the parties. The .requirement that the answer shall be served, is for the convenience of the opposite party, and not to confer jurisdiction
There are other branches of this case, that we will notice before sending it back to the District; Court. The note is a joint note, or a partnership note. The action seems to be a joint action at 1cm against the surviving partner and the administrator of the deceased partner.
It is hardly necessary to say such an action can never be maintained. On a joint note, where one of the makers dies,,
But whilst tbe law seems to have been so settled, generally in tbe more modern cases we are at a loss to understand why tbe former ruling on tbe subject was changed. Tbe legal doctrine about tbe liability of tbe survivor has been settled beyond question for centuries. Tbe partnership property all goes into tbe bands of tbe survivor, tbat be may be enabled to pay tbe partnership debts and settle tbe partnership affairs. Tbe administrator of tbe deceased partner has nothing of tbe partnership assets until all -the firm debts have been paid and its affairs wound up. Tbe surviving partners ought to know
In such case the defendant had the statutory right (a right
Here tbe party bad no such absolute right. Either the judgment was or was not erroneous. If erroneous, tbe appellant has a right to reversal. If not erroneous, be could only address bis application to the favor of tbe Court. The Court in such case could at most only have a discretionary power, with which this Court would not interfere, except in a case of manifest abuse. "We think tbe appeal was properly taken from an erroneous judgment, and that it was tbe only appeal tbe defendant could sustain.
The judgment is reversed, and tbe cause remanded to tbe Court below. Tbe District Court will allow tbe plaintiff to amend bis complaint, and take such other steps in tbe case as may be consistent with tbe rules of practice, and not inconsistent with this opinion.