187 Iowa 777 | Iowa | 1919
I. Did the absence of the appellee toll the statute? Appellant states that appellee “removed” to
Plaintiff suffered an injury in some way, due to something done in a three-story brick building, erected by defendant in Port Dodge. She suffered this injury in September, 1914. About December, 1914, the defendant completed in Fort Dodge a new dwelling house, constructed of hollow brick and concrete. He was a manufacturer of iron and metal products, and has been in that business at Fort Dodge for a number of years. The company of which he was president and principal owner is located at Fort Dodge. Practically all of plaintiff’s business interests have been and are there. A year passed, after the erection of the dwelling house in 1914. In December, 1915, defendant arranged to go, and did go, to California. Of this the plaintiff was advised; for she herself prepared the farewell dinner, the night before defendant and his family left for California. During the absence in California, the Fort Dodge home was closed. No one was left in charge of it, and no one remained upon whom service by substitution might be made. The trip was a 90-day trip. It was taken in part on account of the health of defendant’s wife, in part to look after a mortgage he had on some property in California, and in part for pleasure. Defendant had no intention of giving up his residence in Fort Dodge, or acquiring one in California. He purchased three round-trip, 90-day tickets. The only baggage taken was two trunks and two suit cases. All the furniture and effects of the family were left in the home at Fort Dodge, and the keys thereof with a neighbor. Said residence was offered neither for sale nor rent. There was no intention to change residence, or to do anything except spend the months of December, January,
The ultimate contention of the appellant is that the time during which defendant and his family were out of the state on this California trip should be deducted; because, during that time, whether technically the residence and domicile were changed or not changed, there was no one remaining in the state upon whom or through whom notice might be served. The ultimate argument is that Section 3447 of the Code is tolled during any period during which no service can be made within the state. If we shall find ourselves constrained to hold against this position, the action of the trial court must be sustained.
II. The argument of many cases relied on by appellant would demand most serious consideration, had they been decided under statute law similar to that of Iowa. That argument is that, even though the absence be temporary, and though there be an intent to return, and a return, the fact remains that, during the absence, service of process may not be made, and that sufficiently multiplying such absences1 might easily be resorted to, to. bar a just claim. Ward v. Cole, 32 N. H. 452; Gilman v. Cutts, 23 N. H. 376; Hackett v. Kendall, 23 Vt. 275; Vanlandingham v. Huston, 4 Gilm. (Ill.) 125. But even if statute law had no influence on these cases, an equally persuasive counter argument is possible. It is manifest that considerable hard
It is not purposed to rest our decision wholly upon the character of the absence. We shall presently consider whether the judgment below does not have support other than the nature of defendant’s trip to California. Before turning to these other matters, we inquire what the counter argument on the nature of the absence is — what is said by appellant on that head.
We are cited to Penley v. Waterhouse, 1 Iowa 497, 498. We shall recur to that case in another connection. For the present, we will but say that this is construed in Postlewait v. Howes, 3 Iowa 364, at 377, to rule that the statute would run if one’s family be left in the state. Of course, this has no bearing in support of a claim that, if the family be not left in the state, that fact alone works a change, of residence, and suspends the running of the statute. The case of Webster v. Citizens’ Bank, (Neb.) 96 N. W. 118, was
“If after the cause- of action accrues he depart from the state, * * * the time of his absence * * * shall not be computed as part of the period within which the action must be brought.”
It is held that, where a resident against whom a cause of action has accrued removes his residence to another state, but continues his business in Nebraska, and comes to the state openly, notoriously, and regularly during each business day, and there remains during working hours, he is not absent from the state, within the meaning of that statute. This holds not more than that, if service cam, be made in the state, the question of domicile, as distinguished from residence and from inhabitancy, is an immaterial one. That sheds no light on whether the statute runs though service cannot be made in the state.
We may concede that Carden v. Carden, 107 N. C. 214 (12 S. E. 197), rightly holds that a preacher who is assigned to and lives in a district outside of his state is a nonresident, within the meaning of the attachment laws, though he intends to return, and still claims a residence in the state, and visits it once or twice a year, but has no definite intention as to the time for returning, and merely a general intention to return. But that is not controlling. What else is there? In Harden v. Palmer, 2 E. D. Smith (N. Y.) 172, the defendant had been absent in Europe after the sale of his goods, at one time for 18 months and at another for 2 months; the absences, if deducted, brought the suit-within the statute time; and they were deducted. The real decision is that the debtor had no domicile in the state, and that, therefore, he, of course, resided out of the state while he was in Europe.
We are unable to see how Cohen v. Daniels, 25 Iowa 88, avails the appellant. It holds that, within the purview of statutes requiring personal actions to be brought in the
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The Territorial Act approved February 15, 1843, under which Penley v. Waterhouse, 1 Iowa 497, 498, was decided, provided that, if any person against whom there should be a cause of action specified in a preceding section, “shall be out of this territory at the time of the cause of such action accruing, or at any time during which a suit might be sustained on such cause of action,” then the period of this absence was to be deducted from the statute period. That under such a statute the Penley case was decided as appellant contends the one at bar should be is an argument ■against the appellant’s position, instead of one supporting it. When the legislature declared, by such statutes as have superseded said Territorial Act, that the time to be deducted should be the time of “nonresidence,” it declared that the mere absence which sufficed under the superseded law should no longer be sufficient to toll the statute. And Noble v. State, 1 G. Greene 325, treats such legislative history as this as an important factor in the construction of statutes in pari materia.
Waiving the fact of the statute then in force, it is questionable whether Penley v. Waterhouse, 1 Iowa 497, 498, holds that mere absence from the state tolls the stat- . ute. We think that, although it might well have been held under that statute that mere absence was sufficient, the
Cases like Sleeper v. Paige, 81 Mass. 349, Slocum v. Riley, 115 Mass. 370, Ware v. Gowen, 111 Mass. 526, and Hackett v. Kendall, 23 Vt. 275, are no aid to appellant, because decided under statutes like the Iowa Act under which the Periley case was decided, and which arrests limitation on “absence.” And Hackett v. Kendall, 23 Vt. 275, is further weakened for the purposes of the appellant because in it the domicile in the state was broken up. The case of Chenot v. Lefevre, 3 Gilm. (Ill.) 637, 638, turns, for one thing, upon inability to make service, either personal or by substitution. This is the situation, also, in Hackett v. Kendall, 23 Vt. 275. (Delivery of notice to the sheriff is not mooted.) In Vanlandingham v. Huston, 4 Gilm. (Ill.) 125, at 128, the Chenot case is approved. And it is held that, under the statute of Illinois, whether there exists in the debtor the animus revertendi or not, the statute is arrested whenever the defendant prevents the serving of process.
The case of Hedges v. Jones, 63 Iowa 573, gives some support to the contentions of the appellant. It is said therein that the statute was arrested because defendant “was beyond all reach of the process of the courts of the state. Plaintiff’s remedy on the note was entirely suspended, for the time, by his absence, and we do not believe that it was the intention of the legislature that the limitation of the statute should run in favor of a party during
We are of opinion that the avoidance by appellant is. so far, insufficient.
III. It is apparent by now that we attach great importance to the fact that in nothing relied on by appellant was our statute on commencement of actions considered.
“An action must, we think, be said to be pending at all times from the date of its institution or beginning until it has been adjudicated or dismissed, or has been otherwise finally disposed of. In other words, when an action has once been begun, it is thereafter a ‘pending’ action until its final 'disposition. What shall constitute the beginning of an action is, of course, a matter subject to regulation by statute.”
Then follows a statement that usually actions must be commenced by actually serving notice, but that, “for the purpose of avoiding a plea of the,, statute of limitations,” the provisions of Section 3450 declare a method. To the same effect is Kenny v. Bankers Acc. Ins. Co., 136 Iowa 140, at 142, and Wray v. Wray, 159 Iowa 230.
“Under the law of this state, the statute of limitations is tolled by the commencement of the action.” Knight v. Moline, E. M. & W. R. Co., 160 Iowa 160.
In Snyder v. Ives, 42 Iowa 157, at 163, it is recognized that delivery to the sheriff with intent that there shall be immediate service constitutes the commencement of an action; for it holds that, even if it appear the notice was served a month after the petition was filed, the case is saved, because it will not be presumed that the notice was not delivered to the sheriff at the time the petition was filed, with intent, etc.; and that an action is not barred unless it be shown, for one thing, that original notice was not delivered to the sheriff with such intent.
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Appellant is a citizen of Iowa. She asserts that the tolling of the .statute by nonresidence creates a privilege for her protection. It is a privilege which the legislature could wholly withhold. It follows that it could attach conditions to the giving of the privilege — could put limitations
IV. In our opinion, it does not matter that service could have been made for most of the period of the statute. The plaintiff had the right to defer service to the very la(st day of that period; and, if service had then been made, it would be immaterial that it had not been made earlier.
The holding of Glotfelty v. Brown, 148 Iowa 124, does not avail the appellee. It holds that an intention to change a place of residence, unaccompanied by actual residence in a new location, is insufficient to avoid taxation at the old location. So of Barhydt v. Cross, 156 Iowa 271.—Affirmed.