114 S.E. 175 | N.C. | 1922
This is an action upon a note for $1,500, given as the price of an automobile, possession of which it is alleged was obtained by false and fraudulent representations of Charles H. Reaves, one of the defendants. It is alleged that after getting possession of the car at Graham, in this State, the defendants left the State, taking the automobile with them, and changed their residence to Roanoke, Va., where they now are and have been ever since. They have now no property in this State, and there has been no personal service of process upon them, or either of them, and no attachment of their property, for they had none here, and, of course, no publication for them. The defendant demurred, under C. S., 511, subsec. 1, because it appeared that the court *261 had no jurisdiction of the persons of the defendants, and further, because the court has not jurisdiction of the subject-matter.
It is said in Ogdensburg R. R. Co. v. Vermont R. R. Co., 16 Abbott's Practice (N. Y.), 249, at p. 254: "It was urged that by interposing their demurrer defendants had conferred on the court jurisdiction of their persons, and this would be true had the demurrers been upon any other ground; but being solely on the ground that the court had not jurisdiction of their persons, and that they made a qualified appearance for the purpose of testing that question, and for no other purpose, it had no such effect. A defendant in an action has the right to appear specially for the purpose of raising the question of jurisdiction, and by so doing does not confer jurisdiction generally in the cause. Allen v. Malcolm, 12 Abb. Pr., N.S., 335; Sullivan v. Frazee, 4 Robt., 616; Seymour v. Judd,
It will be observed that in the case just cited, decided under the Code of New York, which is substantially like ours, the defendant did not simply demur because the court had no "jurisdiction of the persons" of defendants, but they first entered a special or qualified appearance for *262 the purpose of raising that question by the court as having important significance in its bearing upon the case.
The fact that there should be a special or qualified appearance instead of a general one does not deprive the defendant of the right to demur on the particular ground assigned by them, for by appearing specially they could still demur on the same ground, or for the same reason, but they must not appear generally. In the latter part of the extract we have made from the Ogdensburg case, supra, the Court is manifestly referring to such a qualified appearance as will confer upon defendants the right to demur specially, as distinguished from a general appearance, which takes away that right. The right to demur for one of the special reasons assigned by defendants, that is, "want of jurisdiction of the person," is not destroyed, or even impaired, by this construction or interpretation of the statutes, but is preserved both in its full integrity and its efficiency. This, at least, is the substantial result. The defendant in the Ogdensburgcase supra, would not take the risk of a general appearance, but qualified its appearance twice, so that in the end it amounted, in that case, to little more, if anything, than a motion to dismiss under a special appearance.
There is another view that may be taken of this matter. It appears by the demurrer that three objections are urged by defendants: first, that the court has no jurisdiction of the persons of defendants; second, none of the subject of the action; and, third, that the cause of action upon the policy of insurance is not maintainable because the policy was issued in the State of Virginia and the loss thereunder occurred in that state. The second and third grounds are considered in law as taken to the merits and not merely to the jurisdiction of the court over the persons of the defendants, and the appearance is in form and in truth a general one, which waives any defect in the jurisdiction arising either from want of service of process on defendants or from a defect therein. The demurrer as to the second and third grounds was addressed to the merits. Ins. Co.v. Robbins,
We must hold, upon principle and authority, that the defendants have made a full appearance in the case, and will be bound in all respects by the orders and decrees of the court. This result follows because they have not confined themselves to a special appearance for the purpose of raising the question of jurisdiction of the person, but have gone beyond that and asked for a hearing upon matters not relating solely thereto, but including other matters, as to the plaintiff's legal rights and their own in regard to the policy of insurance, and still further, they have challenged the jurisdiction of the court as to the subject-matter of the action, and thereby waived any defect as to the jurisdiction of the person, the appearance being considered by all the authorities as a general one. This question is fully discussed in Scott v. Life Association,
Any course that, in substance, is the equivalent of an effort by the defendants to try the matter and obtain a judgment on the merits, in any material aspect of the case, while standing just outside the threshold of the court, cannot be permitted to avail them. A party will not be allowed to occupy so ambiguous a position. He cannot deny the authority of the court to take cognizance of his action for want of jurisdiction of the person, or proceeding, and at the same time seek a judgment in his favor on the ground that there is no jurisdiction of the cause of action. To illustrate the matter, they ask for an adjudication as to whether this court has jurisdiction, not merely of the person, but also of the subject-matter of this action.
We repeat what is said in Scott v. Life Association, supra: "An appearance for any other purpose than to question the jurisdiction of the court over the person is general."
Examining the question presented in this case, though, in the light of actual authority, or decision upon it, we find this statement of the law in Enc. of Pl. and Pr., vol. 2, p. 621, a work of great merit and high authority, and devoted especially to subjects of this character: "But an objection to jurisdiction over the person, to be availing, must not be raised in connection with denial of jurisdiction over the subject-matter. An appearance to deny the jurisdiction of the court over the subject-matter is, according to the weight of authority, a general appearance. It is a familiar rule that a general appearance waives any defect in the process, and confers jurisdiction of the person. To avoid the effect of this rule, it is the common practice, when it is desired to take advantage of any defects in process and to deny jurisdiction over the person, to appear specially for that purpose only. A special appearance is only proper when a party seeks to deny the jurisdiction of the court over his person." We are there cited to Fitzgerald v. Fitzgerald,
The demurrer, so far as it relates to the cause of action on the policy of insurance, is another instance where the same rule was violated.
To restate the matter more precisely, the defendants demurred on two grounds: (1) Want of jurisdiction of the person; (2) want of jurisdiction of the subject-matter.
If they had confined themselves to the first ground all might have gone well with them, but when they asked the court to adjudge as to the second ground, they converted their special appearance, if it was such, into a general one, as they asked for a decision on the merits and thereby waived the other ground, as the above citations prove.
It follows that defendants, by their demurrer, in the respects indicated, have appeared generally in the action, and therefore submitted themselves to the jurisdiction of the court. The judgment upon the cause of action was consequently properly entered, and must stand, as the court had general jurisdiction of it (an ordinary action of debt), but the defendants are entitled to answer over, and no doubt would have been permitted to do so had it been called to the attention of the court, the failure to insert such permission in the judgment being clearly an inadvertence. The court will grant such leave, when the case goes back, if defendants desire to avail themselves of it, and, with this slight modification, the proceedings of the court, including the judgment, are without error.
*267Affirmed.