*330The opinion of the court was delivered by
Mason, J.:In a motion for a rehearing the defendant, among other things, urges that in holding the service of summons to have been sufficient the court has misinterpreted the effect of the taking over of the telephone lines by the government and has departed from its own prior rulings. The basis of the decision may perhaps be made clearer by ->a brief addition to the original opinion. We do not question the completeness of the government’s control of the telephone systems while public management was in force, nor do we suggest that during that period the situation was such as to render the business amenable to state regulation or subject the corporations owning the property to liability for its negligent operation. We regard the terms of the president’s order, in providing for the conduct of the business by the postmaster-general through the owners, directors and officers, as well as the employees of the systems, as indicating the retention to some extent of the corporate organization, but the affirmance does not depend upon the correctness of that view.
As pointed out in the original opinion (ante, p. 130), the statute here involved (Civ. Code, § 70, Gen. Stat. 1915, § 6961) is quite different from that relied upon in Chilletti v. Railway Co., 102 Kan. 297, 171 Pac. 14. It applies to corporations generally, irrespective of their character or their active engagement in business. It provides for the service of summons upon officers because of their relation to the corporation, not because of their being at the time actually performing a particular kind of work in connection with a public utility. The officers of the defendant corporation did not cease to be such upon the taking over of its telephone system by the government, whatever may have been the case with mere employees. From the statutory classification of a managing agent with the officers of a corporation, it is to be presumed that the relation to the defendant of the person described by that title in the sheriff’s return continued, notwithstanding the change in the control of its property — a presumption not overthrown by the affidavit attacking the service, which stated no evidential fact as distinguished from a mere legal conclusion. We hold the delivery of a copy of the summons to him to have *331been sufficient to bring the defendant into court, not because the character of the work he was, then-doing under the government necessarily qualified him- to receive it, but because it was not proved that the relation he had sustained to the corporation at the time the ■ postmaster-general took charge had ever been terminated.-•
2. In behalf of the plaintiff an-argument is renewed which was urged at the original hearing, but not mentioned in the opinion, to the effect that the defendant lost its right to a review of the ruling on its objection to the service by moving for a judgment in its favor on the special findings, and by asking this court to remand the case with directions to enter judgment in its favor. It is argued that inasmuch as a judgment of that character would put an end to the litigation and operate as a bar to any further prosecution of the plaintiff’s claim, the defendant in asking it is seeking affirmative relief. As we view it, the motion for a judgment on the findings, although affirmative in form, was in effect a request that the court decide that as a matter of law the facts found prevented any recovery by the plaintiff. The relief asked was substantially the end sought in any defense on the merits, and the making of such defense did not involve the abandonment of the jurisdictional question. (See Shearer v. Insurance Co., 106 Kan. 574, 189 Pac. 648.)
Other questions reargued have been given further consideration, but the court adheres to the views originally announced.
The motion for a rehearing is overruled.