15 Or. 420 | Or. | 1887
This was an action in ejectment to recover lot 8, in block 183, in Couch’s addition to the city of Portland, Oregon. The plaintiff bases his right to recover upon the invalidity of certain proceedings in a foreclosure suit, which, he claims, rendered the decree therein void. That suit was for a foreclosure of a mortgage executed by the plaintiff Pike and his wife to Klosterman Brothers, upon the property sought to be recovered in this action. It is admitted that if the decree is void, the title to the land in controversy never passed out of the plaintiff by force of that proceeding, and that he is entitled to recover in the present action.
The invalidity insisted upon arises out of an order for the publication of a summons, and the specific objections are: (1) That it does not appear from the affidavit upon which the order of publication was based that the defendants had any property in
In an early case (Vernan v. Holbrook, 5 How. Pr. 4), Parker, J., said: “ The proceeding is authorized, when it shall appear that the defendant, after due diligence, cannot be found within this State. The meaning of this section is not clearly expressed, but I do not think it was intended that an attempt must be first made to serve process where the defendant is a non-resident. The fact of non-residence is evidence that the defendant could not, after due diligence, be found within the State; and so it was held in Rawdon v. Corbin, 3 How. Pr. 416.” But in Wortman v. Wortman, 17 Abb. Pr. 70, it was held that the fact of non-residence of the defendant is insufficient to authorize an order for the publication of a summons, Sutherland, J., saying “that it must appear by affidavit, to the satisfaction of the court or judge, that the person on whom the service of the summons is to be made cannot, after due diligence, be found within -the State; for the section of the Code containing such requirement assumes that, though the defendant be a non-resident, yet that, perhaps, he may be found within the State, and plainly contemplates that some effort shall be made to find and serve the defendant within the State, though he or she be a non-resident.” This case decides specifically that non-residence of the defendant is insufficient, and does not dispense with effort to find the defendant within the State, and the later decisions adhere to this conclusion.
In Carleton v. Carleton, 85 N. Y. 314, the affidavit for an order of publication was as follow0; “The defendant has not
These are the latest authoritative expressions of the court upon the subject-matter under consideration, and the result reached may be thus summed up: That the statute requires proof that the defendant cannot, after due diligence, be found in the State, or proof of such a state of facts as will show that diligence would be of no avail in effecting a service within the State.
The affidavit in the case now under consideration isas follows: “ That said defendants reside at Walla Walla, in the Territory of Washington, which is their postoffice address.that personal service cannot be made upon said defendants or either of them, for the reason that said defendants have departed from this State, and 'remained absent therefrom for more than six consecutive weeks, and now reside at Walla Walla.” As we have seen, non-residence is not of itself sufficient to authorize the order for publication, because that alone is not inconsistent with the idea that the defendant may be in the State doing business, although his residence is in another State, and hence, would not relieve of the necessity or requirement of due diligence. But the allegation of non-residence, in connection with the facts additionally alleged,
The allegation of non-residence is specific and certain in the affidavit — the defendants reside at Walla Walla, Washington Territory, and that is their postoffice address. But this is not enough, and the inquiry now is, whether the further statement, taken in connection with the averment of non-residence, “that personal service cannot be made on the defendants for the reason that they have departed from the State, and remained absent therefrom for more than six consecutive weeks, and now reside at Walla Walla,” show such a state of facts as renders it apparent that no act of diligence would be of any avail to find them within the State. It seems to me that these averments, taken together, are legal evidence, tending to show, at least, not only non-residence, but actual absence from the State at the time when the affidavit was made. The word “now,” in its ordinary acceptation, means “at this time,” or “at the present moment,” or “ at a time contemporaneous with something done.-” It relates to the actual existence of the fact at the time and place mentioned.
The averment that the defendants “now reside at Walla Walla,” means at this time, or at the present moment they live or reside at that place; that is to say, that when the affidavit was made, they were then actually living in Walla Walla. It is intended to emphasize the fact of actual presence at the place of residence, at the time alleged, and is the reason why the affidavit says that personal service cannot be made upon them within the State. When taken together, these averments show, positively and distinctly, that the defendants were not only residents of Washington Territory at that time, but that personal service could not be made on the defendants in this State, because they had left the State, and were then and at that time residing in Walla Walla. Here, then, the proof shows where the defendants were at the time the affidavit was made for the order, the identical matter which was wanting in the affidavit in Carleton v. Carleton, supra, and was thus fatal to its sufficiency.
■ The law requires proof that the defendants cannot be found after due diligence, or proof of such a state of facts as show that
We find no error, and the judgment of the court below is affirmed.