Bente v. Remington Typewriter Co.

BROADDUS, P. J.

This suit originated in a justice’s court, where defendant moved to dismiss the same because the court had no jurisdiction. The motion was overruled, judgment rendered in favor of the plaintiff, from which defendant appealed. In the circuit court, defendant again moved to dismiss because the court had no jurisdiction, which was sustained, and plaintiff appealed, which appeal, he subsequently dismissed and sued out this writ of error. The suit was brought in a justice’s court in Sedalia township, Pettis county. The constable’s return on the writ of summons is as follows: “I hereby certify that I have executed the within writ by leaving a true copy of this writ with M. K. Deale, manager of the Remington Typewriter Co., and in charge of its office and place of business in St. Louis, Mo., as agent and manager of said company, the 3rd of April, A. D. 1903, in Sedalia township, Pettis county, Missouri.”

*80Section 997, Revised Statutes 1899, provides that suits against corporations “shall be commenced either in the county where the cause of action accrued or in any county where such corporations shall have or usually keep an office or agent for the transaction of their usual and customary business.” It does not appear from the return of the constable that the defendant had any such place of business in Pettis county, but that on the contrary, its place of business was in St. Louis, Missouri. He served the agent, who had charge of its place of business, not at its place of business, but in Pettis county, away from such place of business and in another county. Section 995, idem, provides that service, in the absence of the president or other chief officer of a corporation, shall be by leaving a copy of the summons at any business office of the company with the person having charge thereof, or when the corporation has no business office in the county where suit is brought, or if no person shall be found in charge thereof, and the president or chief officer cannot be found in such county, a summons shall be directed to any county in the state where the president or chief officer of such company may reside or be found, or where any office or place of business may be kept of such company, and the service thereof shall be the same as above. Under the section last mentioned, the service should have been on the agent at defendant’s place of business in St. Louis, the president or other chief officer of the company not being found in .the county, and the company haying no other business office. It follows, therefore, that the service on defendant’s said agent did not give the justice jurisdiction on the defendant company, regardless of the fact whether or not suit was instituted in the proper jurisdiction.

But it is insisted that if defendant had appealed from the judgment of the justice, it would have waived jurisdiction. It was so declared in Meyer v. Ins. Co., 92 Mo. App. 392. But in Trimble v. Elkin, 88 Mo. App. *81229, the holding was otherwise. The former was certified to the Supreme Court because it was in conflict with the latter. The Supreme Court held that the law had been properly declared in the latter. And that the filing of a motion to secure costs and taking an appeal from the justice did not waive jurisdiction: [Meyer v. Ins. Co., 184 Mo. 481.] And the court further held that, under “the present practice in this state, a defendant can unite in the same pleading a plea to the jurisdiction, as to the person as well as to the subject-matter, with a plea to the merits, and that he does not thereby waive the question of jurisdiction.”

Other questions are raised by the parties, but as the court properly dismissed the case for want of jurisdistion, there is no reason for their consideration. Affirmed.

All concur.