Plaintiffs each brought an action for damages against defendant for injuries sustained in an automobile accident on March 2, 1966. Original notices (identical except for the respective plaintiff’s name) were served on defendant by substituted service upon Lila G. O’Neill. We set out one of the notices as follows:
“IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF THE STATE OF IOWA IN AND FOR HARDIN COUNTY
YOU ARE HEREBY NOTIFIED that Plaintiff’s petition in the above entitled action is now on file in the office of the Clerk of said Court, a copy of which petition is hereto attached, marked Exhibit ‘A’.
* * * (Duly signed)”
Both notices omitted the salutation clause: TO THE ABOVE NAMED DEFENDANT, or, TO WILLIAM FRANCIS O’NEILL.
By special appearances defendant challenged jurisdiction of the court due to plaintiffs’ failure to include a salutation clause in the original notices as required by rule 50, R.C.P. The trial court sustained defendant’s special appearances and plaintiffs appealed.
The relevant portion of rule 50, Rules of Civil Procedure, provides as follows: “The original notice shall be directed to the defendant, and signed by plaintiff or his attorney with the signer’s address. * * * ”
I. It is too well settled for discussion that compliance with rule 50 is required in order to obtain jurisdiction. Compliance with this rule is the only method by which a plaintiff may compel a defendant to submit to the court for a binding adjudication of their differences. Our previous holdings have firmly established that the provisions of rule 50 are mandatory and that the rule has statutory status. Gordon v. Doden, Iowa,
Appellants contend that the omission is a mere irregularity, that this notice substantially complies with the rule, and that this deletion should not deprive the court of jurisdiction to hear the matter. Appellants rely on our pronouncements that mere irregularities relating principally to the form of the notice or to technical or clerical errors will not be fatal to the jurisdiction of the court, that only a substantial departure from the requirements of the rule will make the notice void. Parkhurst v. White, supra; State ex rel. Hanrahan v. Miller,
However, as we stated in Bice v. Incorporated City of Urbandale, at page 1015 of
The words used in rule 50 are abundantly clear. The rule requires that the original notice be “directed to the defendant.” In the case at bar the notices were not only not directed to the defendant, they were not directed to anyone. In other words, the required salutation clauses are not merely irregular in form, they are wholly left out. We must hold that plaintiffs’ failure to include salutation clauses constitutes a substantial departure from the requirements of rule 50.
Appellants argue that the omission of these saluation clauses did not mislead, deceive, nor prejudice the defendant, and in this particular case we would agrée. Nevertheless, we have consistently held a showing of no prejudice will not avoid the application of rule 50. We stated in Sleeper v. Killion,
The order of the trial court sustaining the special appearances is affirmed.
Affirmed.
