58 N.W. 343 | N.D. | 1894
This action was originally commenced before a justice of the peace. The defendants first appeared specially before the justice, and moved to set aside the summons in the action for the reason that no time was therein specified for the appearance of the defendants. This motion was overruled. Defendants excepted. Thereafter, they answered the complaint in the action; reserving, however, their objection to the jurisdiction of the court because of the alleged insufficiency of the summons. Judgment having been rendered against them, they appealed to the District Court on questions of law only. No new trial was demanded or had. Being defeated in that court, the defendants have brought the case here for review on the single question of jurisdiction.
We think that the justice should have sustained defendants’ motion to dismiss because of the defect in the summons heretofore mentioned. The summons did not, on its face, specify any definite return day. It required the defendants to appear before the justice on the seventh day after the service of the summons upon them, exclusive of the day of service. The summons must
^ But it is insisted that defendants, by their general appearance after their objection to the summons had been overruled, and by pleading to the merits, made a voluntary appearance; that such an appearance conferred jurisdiction; and that, as the only objection here made relates to the jurisdiction of the court, it is immaterial whether the court erred in deciding that it had jurisdiction,
It is further contended that defendants, by appealing to the District Court, have waived all objections to the jurisdiction of the justice of the peace. We are at a loss to discover how the act of invoking the jurisdiction of an appellate court to correct an