OPINION
This is an appeal by plaintiff Brenda Major Weber
1
challenging interlocutory
FACTS
On April 6, 1983, Steven W. Major filed a complaint to quiet title to eleven parcels of real estate located in Summit County. Sny-derville, a Utah general partnership, and Jim Gaddis were two of seventy named defendants. 2 Jim Gaddis holds a ten-percent interest in Snyderville and is its managing partner.
In 1978, Snyderville purchased from Investor Associates a portion of the property at issue in the quiet title action. Robert W. Major executed the pertinent real estate contract on behalf of Investor Associates. Snyderville took possession of the property and made timely payments, with the final payment being made on July 20, 1983. In October 1983, Snyderville recorded a warranty deed for the property given to it by Investor Associates. Snyderville paid property taxes on the parcel through October 1987, when it learned that the trial court had divested it of title by means of a default judgment against it.
From the time it took possession of the subject property in 1978, Snyderville’s address had been correctly listed as Gaddis’s office address on the Summit County tax records.
No filing in the appropriate county or state offices revealed the name of any individual affiliated with Snyderville nor did Snyderville have a telephone directory listing. Although Gaddis was served in his individual capacity at his office on May 11, 1983, the summons served upon him was directed to him individually and made no reference to Snyderville except in the lengthy caption listing all seventy defendants. The return of service indicated that Gaddis had been served personally and did not purport that service on Snyderville had been effected through him. By order dated December 17, 1983, the trial court allowed service by publication upon Snyder-ville and sixteen other named defendants.
As a corollary to service by publication, counsel for Weber prepared a summons for mailing to Snyderville at its tax address, i.e., Gaddis’s office at 1253 East 2100 South in Salt Lake City.
The affidavit of mailing listed Snyder-ville’s address as “1253 East 7100 South,” incorrectly stating the south coordinate by fifty blocks. Although there is no such address, and, according to a Postal Service supervisor’s affidavit, the summons directed to Snyderville should have been returned by the Postal Service, counsel for Weber did not recall that the summons had been returned, although other summonses were returned for insufficient postage. The Postal Service does not keep records of returned first class mail and it is therefore unknown if the mailed summons ever reached Snyderville. Gaddis had no recollection of receiving a summons through the mail.
The trial court entered a default judgment against Snyderville on August 29, 1985. In the fall of 1988, Snyderville sought to have the judgment set aside. The district court determined that there was “no adequate explanation ... [for the] failure to personally serve Snyderville West at its known tax address” and set aside the judgment. In 1989, Snyderville filed a Motion to Dismiss premised on Utah R.Civ.P. 12(b)(5) and 12(b)(6), which was granted. This appeal followed.
On appeal, Weber claims that Snyderville was effectively served through personal
PERSONAL SERVICE
Weber asserts that Gaddis’s position as managing partner of Snyderville qualified him to receive service of process for Snyderville. Weber further claims that service upon Gaddis automatically perfected service upon Snyderville by virtue of his position as managing partner and his status as a partner. We agree that Gaddis was authorized to receive process for Snyderville. See Utah R.Civ.P. 4(e)(5) (service upon a partnership shall be effective through service upon managing or general agent). However, personal service upon Gaddis did not confer jurisdiction over Sny-derville. Weber incorrectly focuses on Gaddis’s capacity, rather than the import of the summons served upon him. Any number of agents or partners of Snyderville might be authorized to receive service for the partnership, yet if no service is ever attempted on the partnership no service on it can be perfected. 4
Rule 4(c) of the Utah Rules of Civil Procedure states, with our emphasis: “The summons shall contain the ... names ... of the parties to the action ... [and]
be directed to the defendant."
Gaddis’s summons was directed to him, not to Snyderville. While this might have provided Snyderville with constructive or even actual knowledge of the action, the insufficiency of process is not thereby cured.
See Stone v. Hicks,
SERVICE BY PUBLICATION
Rule 4(f)(1) of the Utah Rules of Civil Procedure, in effect at all times pertinent to this case, 5 authorized service by publication when personal service is impractical because the
person upon whom service is sought resides outside of the state, or has departed from the state, or cannot after due diligence be found within the state....
The party desiring service of process by publication shall file a motion verified by the oath of such party or someone in his behalf for an order of publication. It shall state the facts authorizing such service and shall show the efforts that have been made to obtain personal service within this state.... The court shall hear the motion ex parte and, if satisfied that due diligence has been used to obtain personal service within this state, or that efforts to obtain the same would have been of no avail, shall order publication of the summons in a newspaper having general circulation in the county in which the action is pending.
Rule 4 requires the exercise of “due diligence” to locate the defendant before the court may authorize service by publication. “Due diligence must be tailored to fit the circumstances of each case. It is that diligence which is appropriate to accomplish the end sought and which is reasonably
Counsel for Weber was faced with the task of sorting through numerous disorganized files containing Robert Major’s personal and business affairs. Many documents were held by family members and former counsel. At the time of trial, counsel could not recall whether he had seen any documents specifically linking Snyder-ville and Gaddis or any contracts or deeds concerning the conveyance to Snyderville among the records he examined.
Snyderville first came to plaintiffs counsel’s attention in a June 1982 title report showing Snyderville’s interest.
In an effort to locate information he considered necessary to serve Snyderville, counsel searched in telephone directories, motor vehicle files, corporate filings in Utah and California, the County Recorder’s files in Summit and Salt Lake counties, and in postal records. It is apparent, however, that Snyderville's address was set forth in the Summit county tax records pertaining to the very property in issue. Counsel’s quest was apparently for the name of a particular individual tied to Snyderville through whom service upon Snyderville could be perfected. Oddly, however, no inquiry was made by counsel at the address disclosed as Snyderville’s address in the tax records, of which counsel had knowledge no later than October 1983, nor was any service of process attempted on Snyderville at this address. 6 Had either been done, Weber would readily have been able to personally serve Snyderville through Gad-dis, whose office was the very address stated in the tax records.
A plaintiff seeking authorization for service by publication on a defendant for whom an in-state address is known must, at a minimum, make inquiry at that address. Cf
. Downey State Bank v. Major-Blakeney Corp.,
DISMISSAL
The thrust of Weber’s challenge of the ultimate dismissal of the complaint as against Snyderville is that the court failed to “issue a brief written statement of the ground for its decision,” as is required on all motions granted under Rules 12(b), 50(a) and (b), 56 and 59 “when the motion is
In
Alford v. Utah League of Cities and Towns,
We may affirm the trial court on any proper ground.
Buehner Block Co. v. UWC Assocs.,
Weber has limited her argument on dismissal insofar as premised on Rule 12(b)(5) to an incorporation by reference of her arguments that Snyderville was sufficiently served either through personal service on Gaddis or by publication. We have treated these arguments above and found both to be without merit. Given the limited scope of Weber’s 12(b)(5) argument, it follows that the order of dismissal should be affirmed.
CONCLUSION
Because Snyderville West was not properly served either personally or by publication, the default judgment entered against it was properly set aside. Because Weber has raised no argument demonstrating error in dismissal on Rule 12(b)(5) grounds, the order of dismissal will not be disturbed.
Affirmed.
Notes
. This action was originally brought by Steven W. Major, personal representative of the estate of Robert W. Major, Jr. During the course of the litigation Steven W. Major died and the
. As may be expected in litigation involving numerous parties and several transactions, the facts before the court are numerous and complicated. We commend counsel for both parties for their succinct presentation of the relevant facts. We further note that both parties’ careful compliance with Utah R.App.P. 24 has assisted the court in efficiently deciding the matters before it. Of particular assistance to the court were the comprehensive addenda of key documents annexed to the briefs.
. Weber also claims that, notwithstanding any deficiencies in service of process, Snyderville is bound by a stipulation for settlement and the judgment entered thereon on January 17, 1986, by reason of the fact Gaddis, through his own counsel, was a party to the stipulation. We find no merit in this argument nor in Weber's lis pendens argument, raised for the first time in her reply brief.
. Weber’s claim that service on Gaddis was adequate to serve the partnership is belied by Weber’s own course of conduct. If she believed Snyderville had been properly served through Gaddis there would have been no need to include it in the motion seeking leave to serve by publication, in the order authorizing publication or in the published summons, nor to undertake efforts to mail the published summons to Sny-derville.
.The comparable rule now appears at Utah R.Civ.P. 4(g).
. Apparently counsel thought that unless he could advise the constable of the name and title of a particular person through whom Snyderville could be served, he could not appropriately seek service of Snyderville at the address of which he was aware. A personal visit to the address would presumably have elicited such information. But such information is not necessarily required. Had counsel simply advised the constable to serve Snyderville at its known address, by and through any "managing or general agent, or other agent authorized to receive service of process_,’’ Utah R.Civ.P. 4(e)(5), one of two things would have happened, either of which would have served counsel’s purposes. The return would have come back indicating service was effected on Snyderville by and through its managing partner, Jim Gaddis, in which event personal service would be complete, or the return would have come back with an “unable to serve” notation, with explanation of the constable’s failure to locate at the address any person having knowledge of Snyderville despite diligent inquiry, in which event the entitlement to serve by publication would be ironclad given the extensive other efforts exerted by counsel.
. We note that any defendant served by publication has standing to challenge the sufficiency of service of process,
Carlson,
. Without minimizing the importance of the written statement required by Rule 52(a), which acquaints both the parties and any reviewing court of the trial court’s rationale, we note that even if the plaintiff had raised the issue of a written statement of grounds before the trial court and the court had not filed its written statement as required by Rule 52(a), we would likely conclude that the omission was harmless error.
Cf. Burnett v. Utah Power & Light Co.,
