17 How. Pr. 93 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1859
If Wheeler was a non-resident of the county of Kings, the justice acquired no jurisdiction of his person by the service of the summons which he issued, and which was returnable more than four days from the date thereof. Section 33 of the non-imprisonment act (Laws of 1831, ch. 300), not only prescribes a short summons as the only process by which a non-resident can be sued in a j Mice’s court, in cases where a warrant cannot be issued, but goes on to declare that if such a defendant is otherwise proceeded against, “ the justice shall have no jurisdiction of the case.” In Harriot a. Van Cott (5 Hill, 285), it was held that a justice’s judgment against a nonresident of the county, sued by long summons, was void, and would not justify a seizure of the goods under execution, in a suit against the plaintiff for taking them. In Bourie a. Mellor (6 Ib., 496), the same rule was held as to a judgment in a suit commenced by a long attachment against a non-resident. The defendant in the present case did not appear so as give the justice jurisdiction. He appeared at the return-day of the summons to state that he was not a resident of the county of Kings. I do not see why this was not a good plea to the jurisdiction. But as the justice chose to disregard it, and proceeded after one adjournment to take testimony and render judgment against the defendant, the objection which he thus attempted to interpose, certainly was not waived nor obviated.
' The judgment was entirely null, and the plaintiff could not enforce it in any way. Whenever and wherever the defect in jurisdiction is properly brought to the knowledge of the court, it must be fatal-to the judgment, and to every proceeding under it. It is said that the defendant is bound to appear before the justice and take the objection to the form of the process, or that it was waived. Admitting that what the defendant did was not sufficient to raise the objection in the justice’s court, it is very clear from an unbroken series of decisions, of which those I
But in the case at bar, the objection was brought to the notice of the justice as I have already stated, and if the allegation made by the defendant on the return of the summons was not a sufficient plea in abatement, I see no reason to doubt that the defect was properly before the county court by the affidavits "offered. It does not distinctly appear whether the affidavit was rejected or the objection overruled. Either way the court erred. It is true this method of trying error's in fact upon affidavit is a crude method of procedure, and strikes every well-trained legal mind with surprise. It is a wretched substitute for the clear and simple mode of assigning error's, and trying their existence which we were accustomed to under the former
As the defendant set up this objection in the county court, in the only way in which the present practice permits, he is- exempted even from the rule which Judge Gardiner states, if that were the law. •
There can be no doubt that such a defect in the process by which jurisdiction should be acquired, is an error in fact. A fact outside of the record which renders the judgment void, and which when properly alleged and proved in any action or proceeding in which the judgment comes in question, will defeat any title or right claimed under it, is sufficient to reverse the judgment in a direct proceeding for that purpose.
The judgment of the county court of Kings county and of the justice must be reversed.