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Toliver v. Morgan
75 Iowa 619
Iowa
1887
Check Treatment
Adams, C. J.

1. Judgement: party defendant: evidence. — The plaintiff Bolles and one Dayton S. Morgan held each a mortgage upon the land in question, executed by J. L. Dean and wife, the plain-™ s mol%age being junior. Dayton foreclosed, and caused the land to be sold on execution, and obtained a sheriff’s deed, and after-wards conveyed to the defendant Margaret M. Dean. In the decree of foreclosure Bolles is mentioned as defendant, and the decree purports to bar his rights. He avers, however, that he was not in fact a party to that action ; that he was, and is now, a non-resident of the state, and was not served with notice of the suit, either personally, or by publication. The evidence shows that the courthouse in which the papers in the case were kept has been destroyed by fire, and that the papers cannot be found. The record book containing the decree was preserved, and also the appearance docket. The decree expressly mentions Bolles as a defendant, and justifies the assumption that he was named in the petition as such. The appearance docket, however, showed merely the filing of the petition, the date thereof, and the name of the plaintiff, and names of the defendants James L.Dean and MargaretM. Dean ; the latter being the mortgagors. It is insisted by Bolles that the entry of his name in the appearance docket was necessary to give the court jurisdiction of him. In support of this position he relies upon sections 198 and 200 of the Code.

*6212. _: jurisdiction: entry of petition in appearance docket. *620If Bolles was named in the petition as defendant, as we think appears from the decree, his name certainly should have been entered in the appearance docket. Section 198 provides that in entering suits the clerk *621shall set out the full names of all the parties, plaintiffs and defendants, as contained in the petition. The question presented is as to the effect of this omission. It may be conceded that the appearance docket was primafacie evidence that Bolles was not named as defendant in the petition. But this we think was overcome by the decree, and there remains only the question as to whether the entry of Bolles’ name in " , , the appearance docket was necessary to constitute the filing of a petition as against him. His position is that a petition cannot be deemed filed as against any one whose name is not entered in the appearance docket. He relies upon section 200 of the Code, which provides that “the clerk shall, immediately upon the filing thereof, make in the appearance docket a memorandum of the date of the- filing of all petitions, demurrers, answers, motions or papers of any description in a cause; and no pleadings of any description shall be considered as filed in a cause until the said memorandum is made. ’ ’

In the case at bar, there was a memorandum of the date of the filing of the petition in the appearance docket, and we cannot say that the petition was not to be considered as filed without going beyond the statute. A provision of so arbitrary a character is not, we think, to be extended by implication, and especially to defeat the jurisdiction of a court which would otherwise clearly exist. An omission by the clerk to enter the name of a defendant in the appearance docket might have the effect to give a right of action against the clerk to any one who should be misled by the omission, to his injury, but we do not think that such omission should be regarded as affecting the jurisdiction of the court.

3. _: _: service of notice: finding of court: construction of decree. *6224. _: _: conclusiveness of decree. *621We come, next, to the question as to the service of notice. The court expressly finds that the “foregoing were duly served with notice. How, while it is true that Bolles had not been expressly named in the caption as defendant, nor in any part of the decree preceding the use of the words “foregoing defendants,” *622yet in the caption the well-known abbreviation uet al.” is added to the name of James L. Dean as defendant, and we take notice that it means the other defendants in the case as shown by the petition. This, together with the fact that Bolles is expressly named later in the decree as defendant, and that the decree purports to bar him, leaves no doubt that the court regarded him as one of the defendants referred to by the abbreviation, and intended to be understood as finding that he had been duly served with notice. The finding of the court that Bolles was duly served with notice must be presumed to be correct, in the absence of any evidence showing to the contrary. Bradley v. Jamison, 46 Iowa, 68. The appellant claims that a different rule was held in Sweeley v. Van Steenburg, 69 Iowa, 701. In that case the court said that the fact of the publication of the notice must be shown by .the record, or the judgment is void. But where the fact of service appears from the decree, we think it is shown by the record, if there is nothing in any other part of the record showing otherwise.

It is said, however, that the evidence shows that the affidavit for publication was filed after the publication, and that the service by publication is therefore necessarily void. To this it is sufficient to say that we have examined the evidence referred to as showing that the affidavit was filed after the publication, and we have to say that we think that the evidence fails to show such fact.

5. Mortgage: purchase by wife under senior lien: redemption Margaret M. Dean, the wife of the mortgagor, having now acquired the title to the land, it is insisted by aPPellant that he should have a right to redeem from her because she joined in the mortgage. But the debt secured was the debt of her husband, and it does not appear that she joined except to relinquish dower. We cannot see how such joinder gives the appellant any rights as against the land.

We think that the decree of the district court must be Abstbmed.

Case Details

Case Name: Toliver v. Morgan
Court Name: Supreme Court of Iowa
Date Published: Oct 27, 1887
Citation: 75 Iowa 619
Court Abbreviation: Iowa
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