Spencer v. Rickard

BobiNsoN, Judge:

This writ of error seeks the reversal,of an order refusing a motion to quash an execution.

Spencer sued Bickard before a justice of the peace for money due on contract. Defendant appeared specially and moved to quash the return of service on the summons. This motion the justice overruled. Defendant then retired and made no further appearance in the suit. A judgment for plaintiff was pronounced and entered. When an execution was issued on the judgment, defendant by proper notice moved the justice to quash the same. The motion to quash -the execution was sustained, and plaintiff appealed from the order of the justice in that particular to the circuit court. When the appeal came on to be heard, the circuit court permitted the return of service on the summons to .be amended. The execution was quashed on the ground that it was not properly directed, but *323■the ground that there was no valid judgment because of illegal service was distinctly overruled.

Subsequent to these proceedings, plaintiff filed a transcript of his judgment in the office of the clerk of the circuit - court of the county, and execution was issued thereon. It is that execution which defendant attacks in the proceedings now before us.

Defendant says that the execution is not supported by a valid judgment. He insists that the judgment is void because no proper return of service appeared on the summons when defendant moved to quash the return. In other words, he maintains that there has been no due process of law — no notice to him.

The amended return of service, however, shows that defendant was regularly served. It shows that legal notice of the suit was given him. How, the main question is: Must the judgment be held to stand on the alleged invalid return of service which defendant unsuccessfully attacked, or on the amendment of the return showing that he really had the character of notice which the law requires when he refused to enter a general appearance in the case ?

The judgment against defendant is plainly a judgment by default, though he contested the showing of jurisdiction. The judgment is the same as if he had not specially appeared. The special appearance really availed him nothing, since his motion thereunder was denied by the justice. He can take only the same advantage that he could have taken if he had not appeared for any purpose. When there is no general appearance, as in this case, a judgment rendered is one by default. A default judgment is void and unenforceable if there was no jurisdiction to render it — if the defendant was not notified in the manner prescribed by law. It has been held that, in cases before justices, improper or illegal notice is waived by a general appearance. Wright v. Railroad Co., 50 W. Va. 653. But the defendant in the case at hand waived nothing by his special appearance. He may still avoid the judgment if he -was not legally brought in to answer the action. He may quash the execution issued thereon, if he was not served with process in the action. But may he thus avoid the judgment merely because the original return was bad, though by an amendment properly *324made it appears that he actually had notice in the manner the-law prescribes ? He insists that he may.

The judgment is not absolutely void if defendant was duly notified,.though the return of service did not show due notice-to him. If process had been legally executed on him at the time of trial, he knew it. He knew the actual manner of the service of notice to answer the suit. If he was served in an illegal way, he could rely on that fatal defect, make no general appearance, and defeat the enforcement of the judgment whenever undertaken. But if he knew that legal service was made on him, he could not allow judgment to go against him by default and thereafter be sure to defeat it simply because the original return did not show the legal service that actually was made; for, by well established law the fact of a sufficient service may thereafter be shown by an amendment of the return. When defendant declined to make a general appearance, knowing, as he must have known, that legal service had been executed on him and only badly returned, he suffered a judgment by default and took the risk of an amendment according to the actual fact which would fully support that judgment. He could only safely take the course which he pursued when he knew that no amendment according to the fact could ever show a valid service of the summons. He has not been unjustly denied an opportunity to defend on the merits, as he submits. He had that opportunity but refused to take advantage of it.

We need not pass on the sufficiency of the original return of service. It is conceded that the amended return, made pending the proceedings to quash the first execution, is good. The amended return shows that defendant had notice of the suit in which the judgment was rendered, as required by law. It proves that the justice had jurisdiction of defendant to render the judgment against him. It supports the judgment and denies the ground on which defendant would quash the last execution issued thereon.

To allow a return of service to be amended according to the fact, in proceedings of the original case which attack the validity of the judgment on the ground of the insufficient return, though the amendment defeats the proceedings, is usual practice. Capehart v. Cunningham, 12 W. Va. 750; Laidley v. Bright, 17 W. Va. 779; Anderson v. Doolittle, 38 W. Va. *325633; Hopkins v. Railroad Co., 42 W. Va. 535; McClure-Mabie Lumber Co. v. Brooks, 46 W. Va. 732; Gauley Coal Land Asso. v. Spies, 61 W. Va. 19; 1 Enc. Digest Va. & W. Va. 356-359. It was merely this practice that was followed in the case under consideration. The course pursued was fully warranted. On the motion to quash the execution, now before us by this writ of error, the amendment of the return of service that had been made in the proceedings to quash the former execution was shown. That amendment stood as a former adjudication, from which no appeal had been taken. As we have said, the amendment proved that there was due notice to defendant before the rendition of the judgment in question. It validated the judgment attacked by the motion to quash the execution. Though it took away the foundation of the motion to quash the execution, the amendment of the service was properly relied on.

A motion to quash an execution is a proceeding in the case in which the judgment was rendered. In this instance it was a proceeding in the nature óf a motion to reverse the default judgment because the summons to answer the action had not been legally served. Clearly was it analogous to a motion for that purpose. Fo direct method of reversal on that ground is provided by statute as to cases before justices. Defendant could not appeal and contest the point of insufficient service, for his appeal would have operated .as a general appearance and the point would thereby have been waived. Wright v. Railroad Co., supra. But when final process was issued in the case, he could then seek a substantial reversal of the judgment by motion to defeat that process: The motion to quash the execution was indeed a motion to reverse the judgment on the ground of the insufficient return. Then, the holding of this Court in Anderson v. Doolittle, 38 W. Va. 633, is applicable and justifies the amendment of the return of service: “It is proper, on the hearing of a motion to reverse a judgment by default for defective return of the summons in the action, to allow the sheriff to amend his return, and then overrule the motion to reverse, if the amended return be good. The amended return relates back, and takes the place of the original defective one.”

An order will be entered affirming the judgment.

Affirmed.