16 Wis. 588 | Wis. | 1863
By the Court,
Upon affidavit, as prescribed by statute, the court or a judge thereof, or a court commissioner, may grant an order that the service of the summons be made by publication. R. S., ch. 124, sec. 10. “The order shall direct the publication to be made in one newspaper, to be designated as most likely to give notice to the person to be served, and for such time as shall be deemed reasonable, not less than once a week for six weeks,” &c. Id. If the circuit judge who granted the order in this case, in the exercise of the discretion vested in him by the statute, directed publication in a German instead of an English newspaper, as being most likely to give notice to the person intended to he served, we see no legal objection to it. Kellogg vs. Oshkosh, 14 Wis., 623. The publication was in the English, not the German language, so that no exception can be taken to it on that ground. Liberty to file the answer was part of the relief demanded by the motion to set aside the judgment, so that whether the answer should have been received without the deposit required by sec. 38, ch. 22, Laws of 1859, is a question fairly presented by the appeal. We think the answer in this respect defective, and that the court was in error in not rejecting it for want of the deposit. It is clear that the answer does not make a case in which no deposit is required by the the terms of the act. It does not show that the land was not liable to taxation, nor that the tax was paid before sale, nor that the deed was never exe
With this unders landing of the act and of the effect to be given to it, it ceases to be the means of such oppression and injustice as the counsel for the defendant seems to suppose. It does not destroy the remedy of the defendant for any wrong or injustice which he may actually have received ; nor compel him to purchase justice, except at the expense of doing justice himself.
That the legislature has seen fit to apply so benign and correct a principle to actions of this kind, is certainly no ¡good ground of complaint, as it is manifestly no infringement of the constitution.
Order reversed, and cause remanded for further proceedings according to law.