37 Vt. 74 | Vt. | 1864
The notice to the town of Strafford of the order of removal, was given by a service made by an officer under the provision of the statute authorizing service as a writ of summons is by law required to be served. It appears that the copy of the order which was given to the officer to serve had no certificate of the justices upon it, other than their signature to the order, that is, to the copy of the order, and that the copy left with the overseer of Strafford contained no copy of any such certificate. The officer regularly served such paper as the justices furnished him. The plea in abatement presents the question whether such a service was a compliance with the statute, the paper and service being otherwise regular; and if not, whether it was amendable. The county court refused to grant a motion to amend, on the ground that it was not amendable, and quashed the order.
1. The plaintiff claims that a copy of the order sighed, by the justices is all that the statute requires ; that is, that their names be
Previous to the act of 1850, authorizing notice by service by an officer, the provision for notice was that “ a true copy of such order, certified by the justices making the same,” shall be left, &c. Under that statute any private person might leave the copy with the overseer, and the only evidence the overseer had that it was a copy, was the certificate of the justices. The practice, so far as I am informed, under that statute, was to annex such certificate to the order. The act of 1850, containing substantially the same language, shows that it was not the intention to dispense with such certificate.
The certificate is an indispensable requisite, and a constituent part of the process to be served, and without it the statute is not complied with,
2. Can the defect be cured by amendment? If the officer had had a perfect paper, and the defect had been only in the officer’s return, I see no objection- to allowing the officer to amend his return according to the fact, at least by cpnsent of the justices, the same as
The county court properly refused to allow the amendment.
Judgment affirmed.