39 Wash. 130 | Wash. | 1905
This is an appeal of defendant Mitchell, Lewis & Staver Company, from a judgment alleged to have been taken by default against it, tbe contention being that tbe summons served was not definite enough to give tbe court jurisdiction over tbe persons of tbe defendants. This
“This cause coming on this day, on motion of plaintiffs for judgment and decree in accordance with the finding of facts and conclusions of law made and filed herein, and the court being now fully advised, grants said motion. Wherefore, it is by the court considered, adjudged, and decreed that plaintiffs have judgment against the defendants,” etc.
It is well established that every intendment will be brought to bear to sustain a judgment which is regular on its face, and, in the absence of a showing to the contrary, the presumption will be that the court acted within its jurisdiction. There is nothing in this record to show that the judgment was a default judgment, or that subsequent summons might not have issued, or that the- parties defendant did not appear. If the summons was not sufficient to give the court jurisdiction, it might well be that one of the findings of fact spoken of by the court was a finding to the effect that the defect in the summons had been cured by the appearance of the defendants. Those findings are not before this court, and the language of the court indicates that the judgment was based upon regular proceedings; and, in the absence of a showing to the contrary, this court will not presume that the trial court acted without jurisdiction.
A supplemental record, however, has been filed by the appellant, evidently with the intention of curing the want of a necessary showing of lack of jurisdiction in the record, to the effect that the defendant, appellant here, moved for the vacation of the judgment for the reason that the summons upon which said purported default judgment was rendered was insufficient to give jurisdiction to the court to render any personal judgment against the defendant. But,
The judgment is affirmed.