6 W. Va. 46 | W. Va. | 1873
This was a judgment on an undertaking against two of the persons signing the same, rendered after service of notice and proof thereof in Court. The return of the deputy sheriff on saicf notice being defective, leave was given him to amend. In making his amendment of service, he also changed or altered the notice, itself, by ■supplying the blanks appearing therein. This he had no right or power to do. The notice is the act of the party, not of the sheriff; his sole business was to make return how he had executed the same, just as it came to his hands, without regard to any defects therein. A notice of motion for the recovery of money is in the nature of process, and in regard to it, the 5th section, chap
Arc these defects sufficient to in validate the notice ? I think they are not. Notices like the present, in the nature of process, and every summons to institute proceedings, are only designed to furnish information to the parties interested, that such proceedings have been commenced, by whom, and the time, place, and tribunal where they will be heard. It is true, indeed, that this information should be ample, and given in a form which cannot mislead, surprise or deceive, but when this is accomplished, ordinarily their office is ended. If the defect complained of cannot operate to the injury of the opposite party, it should be disregarded. In the case of Hare vs. Niblo, 4 Leigh, 359, a capias ad respondendum is made returnable to the next term, generally, instead of to the first day of the term, as the statute requires; the writ is executed before the time and returned to the first day: an office judgment is entered at rules: at ensuing term, Defendant moves to quash the writ, and all the proceedings on it at rules on the ground that the writ being returnable to term generally, was naught; and the Court overruled the motion; Held, that the motion was rightly overruled. So here on the day on
As to the other blank, the parties must have understood that a judgment would be asked for by William H. White, who was the payee in the undertaking; and who had signed the notice, notwithstanding the omission of the pronoun “I.” There is here no possible ground of misapprehension as to its meaning; the parties had all sufficient information.
A date to the notice is immaterial, much less a blank •therein, if it has been served in time. The notice is then held to be sufficient.
This notice having been given and proved by the return of the sheriff, the Court rendered judgment against two of the Defendants, which judgment is affirmed with damages and costs, to the Appellee.
After the above opinion was given, the attention of the Court was directed to the original ' manuscript record, and on a careful inspection thereof, the Court is satisfied that there is no variance between the notice and the undertaking; and the judgment of the Circuit Court is •therefore affirmed, with damages and costs to •the Appellee.