105 Ky. 273 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1899
delivered the opinion of the court.
These two cases were heard together, the record being the same in each case. White’s administrator brought suit against the bridge company, an Ohio corporation, .alleging that, under a contract with the properly constituted authorities, the company undertook to build for Daviess county an iron bridge over Rhodes creek, such bridge to be well built and strong, and suitable for the passage over it of the public and such vehicles as are used by the public upon the highways of the country; that the company did build such bridge, to all appearances,
At August term, the plaintiff moved the court to allow the sheriff to correct the return on the summons, and to correct the judgment, and the motion was set for hearing on September 10th. The notice stated that the motion would be for leave to the sheriff to amend his return on the summons “by inserting therein the. first name or initials of the defendant’s chief officer or agent,-Smith, on whom the return shows that the process was served,” and to
Very many questions have been raised in the argument, but, in our judgment, most of them are not necessary to be decided. Upon the face of the summons, which commanded the sheriff to summon the Youngstown Bridge Company, of Youngstown, Ohio, it appeared that the company was a non-resident of Daviess county and the State of Kentucky. Without considering whether it was necessary for the return to state that the summons was executed on the Youngstoion Bridge Company, by delivering, etc., we are of opinion that the return is not sufficient evidence of service to sustain a judgment: The name given, “-Smith,” as that of the person to whom the copy was delivered, is as near no name as can be conceived. The return states his agency for the company in the past tense, alleging that he “toas” the chief agent of the company, etc. It does not show what office he held in the company to constitute him its chief agent in Daviess county ; nor does it show that he held any of the positions which, in subsection 33 of section 732 of the Code, are
In Daviess Co. v. Dickinson, 117 U. S. 664, 6 Sup. Ct., 901, the Supreme Court said: “An officer’s certificate of a fact which he has no authority to determine is of no legal effect. Dixon Co. v. Field, 111 U. S., 83, 4 Sup. Ct., 315.”
In Arkansas Coal Co. v. Haley (Ark.) [34 S. W., 545], the court said: “The return upon the summons issued by the clerk in this action does not show a legal service upon
In Cook on Stockholders, (3d Ed.) Sec., 758, it is said: “Where service on an agent is allowed if certain officers can not be found in the county, the return of , service on an agent must show that the officers were not within the jurisdiction.”
In Barbourville Real-Estate Co. v. Matthews, 14 Ky. Law Rep., 767, the summons against appellant was returned, “Executed on Andrew Johnson;” and an alias was returned, “Executed on E. S. Bain, secretary Barbourville Land & Real-Estate Co.,” and it was held by the Superior Court that, as there was nothing to show that the person on whom the summons was served was the chief officer or agent of appellant in the county where summons was served, appellant was not before the court, and the judgment against it was void, and the recital in the judgment that defendant had been duly served with summons executed upon its president and secretary did not cure the defect.
In Mars v. Oro Fino Mining Co. (S. D.) 65 N. W., 21, it was held that, “where a sheriff assumes to make service upon a corporation by serving the summons upon an officer or managing agent, his return should show that the service was made upon such officer or managing agent in terms, in order to give the court jurisdiction of the corporation. The return of the sheriff was therefore clearly insufficient to give the court jurisdiction of the defendant.”
Objection to the motion to quash is urged on behalf of White’s administrator, upon the ground that the motion to quash the return of service did not disclose who was the chief officer through whom service might be made upon the corporation; and an opinion by Judge Hazelrigg in the case of Newport News, etc. v. Thomas, 96 Ky., 614, [29 S. W. 437], is relied upon. Without considering the question whether the statement of the law in this regard in that opinion was not dictum, as the case was determined upon another ground, it is sufficient to say that the affidavit of the company’s secretary and treasurer shows that it had no agent in Daviess county upon whom service could be made, and the record discloses that the plaintiff had already had notice served upon the company’s chief agent in the State in the county of Jefferson. So that, as the plaintiff knew who was the person upon whom service might be made, and
The motion to quash the return and set aside the judgment should therefore have been sustained.
Upon the hearing of the motion, no evidence was offered by the plaintiff to show that the return could be amended, but, on the contrary, the affidavit of the deputy sheriff filed by the company tended to show that he could not supply the missing Christian name or initials. It is true that, at a subsequent day, another affidavit of the deputy sheriff was offered, stating that hq knew the initials of the man Smith to whom the copy of the summons had been delivered. But, even if amended in that particular, the return would still be insufficient to give the court jurisdiction. It was therefore not error in the court to overrule the motion for leave to the sheriff to amend his return. Wherefore the judgment is affirmed upon the appeal of White’s administrator, and reversed upon the appeal of the Youngstown Bridge Company, and the cause remanded, with directions to set aside the judgment and quash the return