26 Or. 381 | Or. | 1894
1. The complaint as filed in the justice’s court may have been subject to a demurrer, but it does not follow that a judgment entered thereon is void. If the object of the plaintiff can be ascertained from the allegations of his complaint, and the court has power to grant the relief demanded, and jurisdiction of the parties, the judgment is not vulnerable to a collateral attack, although the complaint may in fact be bad in substance: Van Fleet on Collateral Attack, § 256; Berry v. King, 15 Or. 165, 13 Pac. 772.
2. If it be conceded that the summons was defective, because not in the form prescribed in the act of eighteen hundred and ninety-three, it was, nevertheless, issued and signed by the proper officer, and contained information sufficient to warn the company that a judicial proceeding was pending against it in a particular court, and that if it did not appear therein on a certain day and answer the complaint, a copy of which was served with the summons, judgment would be taken against it for a certain sum of money; and we are therefore of the opinion that the judgment given for want of such appearance cannot be questioned in a collateral proceeding. There is an important difference between a want of jurisdiction and a mere defect in obtaining it. In the former case the judgment is absolutely void, and may be impeached whenever it is sought to be used as a valid judgment; but in the latter case it is simply erroneous and voidable, and can be attacked only in some direct proceeding authorized by law. When there is some irregularity in the form of the process, or in the manner of its service, the party served can take advantage thereof by some appropriate proceedings in the court where the action is pending, and by neglecting to do so he waives the irregularity and cannot attack the
Affirmed.