8 Wash. 263 | Wash. | 1894
The opinion of the court was delivered by
— This action was brought by the appellant to quiet the title to a certain piece of real estate as against the defendant. The source of title of each of the parties was the same; both claimed by virtue of execution sales against Henry Bickle, jr. There was no personal service on the defendant, and the validity of the j udgments and sales depends upon the regularity of attachment proceedings which were instituted at the time of the commencement of the actions. It clearly appears from the record that the sale under which appellant claims was the first one, and if valid conveyed to it a good title.
It is contended on the pai’t of the respondent that the judgment under which this sale was made was absolutely void, for the reason that the court never obtained any jurisdiction of the subject matter. The ground of such contention is, that there was no affidavit filed with the clerk as a foundation for the attachment proceedings.
Upon this question the record shows that a paper was filed in the form of an affidavit signed by a person who represented himself as the attorney for the plaintiff, but there is nothing upon the face thereof to show that it was ever sworn to. Such being the case, the question is presented as to the force to be given such paper. If it should be treated as having no effect, then it must follow that the attachment proceedings founded thereon were absolutely void. It does not appear from the record that the paper was in fact sworn to. If it did, it is probable that under our liberal statute as to amendment of all papers in attachment proceedings, the omission of the officer to sign the jurat could be treated as a clerical error, and the proceed
Some cases have been cited by counsel for appellant where the absence of the signature of the officer to the jurat has been held not to be fatal to the proceedings. Such cases, however, are not numerous. We have been able to find only two which squarely establish such a doctrine. Wiley v. Bennett, 9 Baxt. 581; Stout v. Folger, 34 Iowa, 71.
These cases would be authority for the contention of the appellant that such omission did not render the proceedings void, if the facts shown by the record had been similar to those in the case at bar, but such was not the case. There it was made clearly to appear to the court that the affidavit had been in fact sworn to, and it was held that, as the required facts had been set forth in the form of an affidavit, and their truth vouched for by the oath of the party, he should not be deprived of his rights by reason of the inadvertent omission of the officer to sign the jurat. We have been unable to find a single case which went so far as to hold that the proceedings could be sustained where the statute required an affidavit without its being made affirmatively to appear in some manner that an affidavit was in fact made and filed. In our opinion, no title passed to plaintiff by virtue of the execution sale under which it claims title, for the reason that the judgment upon which such sale was made was absolutely void.
There is a point made in appellant’s brief, that it should be relieved from the judgment by reason of the fact that it asked for an adjournment of the taking of proofs before the referee for the purpose of allowing it to produce at the adjourned day a witness to prove that the affidavit was in fact sworn to, and that the referee refused to grant such adjournment. If the appellant had sought relief from the action of the referee by a sufficient showing before him and in the lower court upon the presentation of his report, and had been unable to obtain it, this court could grant such relief. But nothing of this kind was done. The case was not before the referee for him to take the testimony and report findings of fact and law, but only that he might take the proofs offered, and report the same to the court; hence the action of the appellant in simply making a request for such adjournment, and, so far as the record shows, acquiescing in the refusal of the referee to grant the same, without being followed by any attempt to further secure its rights in that regard, will not j ustify us in interfering with the judgment on account of the refusal of the adjournment by the referee. Upon the report of the referee the case came before the court for trial, and if the appellant felt that it had been denied an opportunity to introduce such proofs as were necessary before the referee, it should have asked leave to introduce the same upon the hearing.
The judgment of the lower court must be affirmed.
Dunbar, C. J., and Scott, Stiles and Anders, JJ., concur.