195 Iowa 1081 | Iowa | 1923
In March, 1919, the plaintiffs purchased of the defendants 480 acres of land in Lyman' County, South Dakota. For nearly two years thereafter, both plaintiffs and defendants continued as residents of that county. Shortly before the beginning of this action, the defendants had become residents of the state of Ohio. About the same time, the plaintiffs claimed to have discovered that the land purchased by them was impregnated with alkali, from which cause great injury had been suffered by them by reason of its effect upon stock kept upon the farm. For the purpose of obtaining jurisdiction over the defendants or over their property outside of the state of Ohio, a ruse was resorted to by the plaintiffs, and participated in by a brother and sister residing in Sioux City, Iowa. The defendants held a second mortgage of $6,100 against the plaintiffs. This
It is well settled that the courts will not tolerate resort to trickery or deceit for the purpose of obtaining jurisdiction over the person or property of a defendant who would not otherwise be subject to that jurisdiction. Our cases to that effect are cited in Crandall v. Trowbridge, 170 Iowa 155, 156, though the finding in the Crandall case was adverse to the defendant upon the facts. There is no serious dispute between counsel as to the holding of the cases, and we need not, therefore, review them.
The real points urged by the appellants as grounds of reversal are: (1) That the defendants did not raise the question of jifrisdiction by special appearance, and are, therefore, bound by their general appearance; (2) that the defendants did not show a want of knowledge of the alleged deceit, prior to the entering of their appearance, and that they thereby waived the fraud, if any; (3) that the defendants did not move promptly
The record before us is unsatisfactory in form for the purpose of a review. The parties appear by mutual consent to have done more or less of their pleading orally and to have had the same preserved by the reporter. The motion to abate, which was sustained by the trial court, was partly oral and partly in writing. Preceding the motion, there was a substituted answer filed, which purported to recite the facts disclosed by the evidence of the plaintiffs. With this substituted answer the motion was filed. The motion incorporated the recitals of the substituted answer. Whether or not the recitals of the motion were verified is not disclosed by the record. The same is true of the allegations of the substituted answer, as well as of all the other pleadings. No objection appears to have been urged at the trial, either to the answer or to the motion, as lacking in verification. Inasmuch as the petition, under the requirements of the statute, was necessarily verified, for the purpose of obtaining an attachment, we will presume, in the silence of the record, that the subsequent pleadings were likewise verified. The facts constituting the ruse or deceit practiced by the plaintiffs appeared in the sworn testimony of one of the plaintiffs. The fact that the defendants were deceived thereby, and that they had no knowledge of the ruse prior to the disclosure of the trial, appeared in the recitals of the motion. The recitals of the motion were not contested in the trial court by any counter affidavit or by any objection to the form of the recitals; nor was the question of waiver presented, either by pleading or otherwise.
Upon this state of the record, we would not be justified in ignoring the evidence as it was presented below, without objection. In the absence of knowledge by the defendants that jurisdiction over their property had been obtained by means of deceit[ they were not concluded by their failure to enter a special appearance in lieu of a general appearance. Their motioi was filed at the close of plaintiffs’ evidence, though it is true that a Sunday intervened after the close of the evidence.and before the filing of the motion.
We reach the conclusion that the evidence before the trial court was sufficient to sustain its order of dismissal. The pro