Court Opinion

ID: 4916546
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2021-09-22 00:10:19.979222+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T08:13:53.110810
License: Public Domain

Cockrell, J.,
(after stating the facts.) For convenience we shall call the parties, plaintiff and defendant, according to the positions they occupied respectively in the Circuit Court and shall discuss the assignments in the chronological order in which the rulings were there made.
Did the court err in overruling the motion to quash the return of the service of the writ?
Generally speaking motions, as distinguished from pleas, are addressed to some discretionaly matter upon which the court’s action is requested or to some defect on the face of the record, while other matters are more properly presented by a plea; motions are summary and disposed of by the court, while pleas are more orderly and are tried by a jury. On ah inspection of this motion and the affidavits filed in its support, it will lb.e noticed that the motion is not addressed to the court for the purpose of having its officer amend his return so as to speak the truth, nor to have made a fuller return that he might officially make under the responsibility of his bond, nor does it controvert the truthfulness of any part of the return as made.
Under our statutes service of the writ is effected by reading the writ or summons to the person to be served or by delivering him a copy, thereof, and process against a corporation, domestic or foreign, may be served (1) upon the president or vice-president or other head of the corporation; (2) in the absence of such head upon the cashier or treasurer, or secretary or general manager; (3) in the absence of all the above upon any director of such company; (4) in the absence of all the above upon any business agent resident in the county in which the action is brought; (5) if a foreign corporation shall have *259none of the foregoing officers as agents in this. State, service may be made upon any agent transacting business for it in this State. Rev. Stats, of 1892, sec. 1019. In the foregoing classification a distinction is clearly made between officers and agents, and only as to the latter is there a qualification as to residence or transaction of business.
The objection is not to the writ itself nor to the service of the writ but to the return of the sheriff as to the service. Section 1026, Revised Statutes of 1892, having for its title Return of execution of process, reads: “All officers to whom process shall be directed shall note upon the same the time when it comes to hand, the time when it was executed, the manner of execution, and the name of the person upon whom it shall be executed, and if such person be served in a representative capacity, the position occupied by him'. A failure to set forth the foregoing facts shall invalidate the service, but the return shall be amendable so as to state the truth at any time upon application to the court from which the process issued, and upon such amendment the service shall be as effective as if the return had originally stated such facts. A failure to state said facts in the return shall subject the officer so failing to a fine not exceeding ten dollars, at the discretion of the court.”
The first, second, third and sixth grounds of the motion are directed to the form of the return, the fourth and fifth allege new matter. The first three 'are based on the absence from the return of a statement that the Georgia corporation was doing business in Florida, or that the president on whom the service was attempted to be made then resided in Florida, or that he was then in Florida on business or matters connected with the defendant in such wise as to render the defendant amenable to the *260jurisdiction of the court. We fail to find any thing in the law that calls upon the sheriff to make return as to these matters, and we fail to see how it would add to the effect of his return to incorporate therein matters beyond his official knowledge.
The sixth and last ground of the motion is ¡based upon the misprision in naming the defendant The Ellis and Young Company instead of The Ellis-Young Company. This naming is under a videlicet and a reference to “the within named defendant,” where in the writ the defendant is given its true name.
There seems to be a difference in the adjudged cases as to the procedure for raising the questions presented by the fourth and fifth grounds of the motion. In the federal courts it has been permitted frequently to present by motion and affidavit the issue of jurisdiction over the person of foreign corporations, but in most of the cases we have examined the question has arisen over the truthfulness of the officer’s return alleging agency on the part of the person served; there are however some that permit the question before us to be raised by motion. We are of the opinion, however, that not only the sounder reasoning and the weight of authority but the current of our own decisions compel us to the conclusion that where the truthfulness of the sheriff’s return is admitted, matters dehors such return must be raised by plea. See Engelke & Feiner Milling Co. v. Grunthal, 46 Fla. 349, 35 South. Rep. 17; Tarrance v. State, 43 Fla. 446-460, 30 South. Rep. 685, and cases cited; Greer v. Young, 120 Ill. 184-190, 11 N. E. Rep. 167; Camden Rolling Mill Co. v. Swede Iron Co., 32 N. J. L. 15.
Did the court err in refusing to strike the first three pleas ?
*261The defendant insists that the ruling of the court on motions to strike is discretionary and not reviewable, and cites cases from other States that are more or less in point. This court has frequently entertained errors assigned on such rulings, and while a discretion may be conceded the trial court in disposing of matters as to compulsory amendments for indefinitenesy and the like, yet we are fully ‘as well able as that court to pass upon matters that go to-the gist of the controversy. The objection to these pleas is not formal but fundamental and is open to us for review.
The serious question then recurs. Were these pleas waived iby the pleas to the merits filed simultaneously, or to put the question in another form' “Is it permitted under our practice to plead to the jurisdiction of the courts of this State over the person of the defendant and at the same time to ask the court to adjudicate the merits of the cause?”
It is conceded' that this could not be done at the common law, but it is contended that the common law has been changed in this respect. The only changes are to be found in sections 1062 and 1063 of the Revised Statutes of 1892 and Common Law Rule 60, as follows:
Sec. 1062. “All pleas shall be sworn to, either by the defendant or his agent or attorney. But it shall be no objection to any plea that it is contradictory to any other plea filed by the same party in the same cause.”
Sec. 1063. “The defendant may plead as many matters of fact as he may deem necessary to his defence.”
Rule 60. “Upon the trial, where there is more than one count, plea, avowry, or cognizance, upon the record, and the party pleading fails to establish a distinct subject matter of complaint in respect of each count, or some dis*262tinct ground of answer or defence in respect of each, plea, avowry or cognizance, a verdict and judgment shall pass against him upon each count, plea, avowry, or cognizance, which he shall have so failed to establish, and he shall be liable to the other party for all the costs occasioned by such count, plea, avowry, or . cognizance, including those of the evidence, as well as those of the pleading.”
“It is an admitted canon, applicable to the construction of statutes, that when a statute contravenes or alters a principle of the common law it must always be strictly construed.” Sealey v. Thomas, 6 Fla. 25-33. Even a criminal statute, that is in modification of the common law, will not be presumed to modify it further than is expressly declared; and construction or intendment will not be resorted to for the purpose of extending its operation. Webb v. Mullins, 78 Ala. 111. For the purposes of this case we may admit that the sections referred to, taken in connection with the quoted rule, which was adopted by this court for the .government of the Circuit Courts and has the force and effect of the statute, do away with the common law objections to the simultaneous filing of pleas in bar and certain pleas in abatement, yet the pleas before us are not strictly pleas in abatement.
Chitty, in speaking .of pleas to the jurisdiction, which are subdivided into the three classes of the subject matter, the person and the thing, says: Pleas of this description, though in effect they abate the writ, yet differ from pleas in abatement, principally in three points, vis: that they must be pleaded in person; that only half defense should be made, and that they should conclude si curia cognosc&re velit (whether the court should take cognizance) and not quod cassat i&rveUir (that the bill may be quashed). 1 Chitty 411*.
*263That the mischief of the common law sought to be remedied was the frequent hardship of the rule requiring singleness of issue and that the statute was designated to effect no other change is made more manifest when we go to the original act of November 23, 1828, out of which the quoted sections of the Eevision were carved. It reads: “Sec. 26. In all cases, the defendant or defendants may plead as many matters of law or fact, as he, she, or they may deem necessary to his, her or their defence; and it shall be no objection to any plea that it is contradictory to any other plea filed by the same party in the same cause.” If it be permitted to file contradictory pleas now that the oath thereto is no longer required by the constitution, but by statute only, the contradiction must be one of fact, not of logic, nor does the act undertake to do away with all the consequences of such pleading.
There is an embarrassing paucity of adjudications on the precise point. Our attention has been called by counsel and our own research to decisions permitting the ordinary pleas in abatement, such as misnomer, another cause pending, jurisdiction of the amount to be filed with pleas on the merits. In Byler v. Jones, 79 Mo. 261, it was said •the defendant could include in his answer a defense to the merits, without foregoing the benefits of his plea to the jurisdiction and in support thereof merely refers to a ruling in Little v. Harrington, 71 Mo. 390, in which it was held that there could be united a plea of nonjoinder and a plea to the merits, under the code system and former decisions to the contrary are overruled. Under the code system it seems all objections that can not be raised by demurrer must be embraced in one answer, and the decisions of the courts working under such a system can shed no light upon the point before us.
*264The only other -case to which our attention is called that •holds such pleas may be united is Gardner v. James, 5 R. I. 235, where it is said: “If he plead to the merits without first insisting upon the objections, he is deemed to have waived it, and can not afterwards plead that matter in abatement; and at common law pleading to the merits at all, before a judgment of respondeat ouster, would be a waiver of such plea in abatement. Under the practice universally prevailing in our courts, by which the defendant files all his pleas at the same time, whether in abatement or in bar, but in the regular order of pleading, first insisting upon the matters in abatement, it can hardly be held that the filing of pleas in bar is a waiver of those in abatement.” The ruling is squarely based upon the universal practice there prevailing. We are not aware of such a universal practice in the'Florida courts.
We do not feel bound- by the adjudged cases, therefore, but are free to- exercise an independent judgment. It must be borne in mind that if the .facts existed, as set forth in these pleas, the defendant could absolutely ignore the attempted service, and the court’s judgment should any be entered, would be without validity even on collateral attack, and the defendant is presumed to know the law that it could be brought into the case only by its own act, no- compulsory process being of -avail, and in the light of this knowledge, he appears in the court, not in its own proper person, but by the agency of an officer of the court and asks that court to adjudicate its rights, while at -the same moment it asks to be heard, by that same agency, to deny that court’s jurisdiction over its person.
A principle, persuasive, if not conclusive, has been frequently applied by us. In Oppenheimer v. Guckenheimer, *26534 Fla. 13, 15 South. Rep. 670, we decided that “where a defendant in error appears specially for the purpose of objecting to the issuance or service of the scire facias, and thereby presenting the question of the jurisdiction of the court over his person, he must restrict his motion to the ground of such jurisdiction, and must not include therein some other ground that recognizes the jurisdiction of the court over his person, and amounts to an appearance by him,” and in Dudley v. White, 44 Fla. 264, 31 South. Rep. 830, the quoted language was repeated with the addition “and we may now add that if he does so, the motion will be held to be a general appearance, notwithstanding the fact that it is made in pursuance of a special appearance.” In the latter case the ground of the motion, setting forth a claim of defendant’s privilege to have the action brought in another county in the State, was held to recognize jurisdiction of the person and a waiver of defective service of process. The same principle was recently applied by us in Ray v. Trice, 48 Fla. 297, 37 South. Rep. 582.
In the face of these decisions and in the knowledge that biy its own act alone could the Florida courts obtain jurisdiction over its person, the defendant has voluntarily appealed to our court for an adjudication on the merits of the controversy, before having that court pass upon the question of jurisdiction properly presented, and it thereby subjected its person by its own act to the jurisdiction of the Circuit Court, and the pleas which sought to question this jurisdiction, so admitted on the record, should have been stricken.
The third plea we do not read as attempting to set out a claim of personal privilege to 'be sued in Levy county, even should the statutory right for such a claim apply to *266non-residents, but is an attempted denial of jurisdiction over the person.
There is nothing in the suggestion of want of jurisdiction over the subject matter. The Circuit Courts in this State are courts of most general jurisdiction, successors in sort to the Court of King’s Bench in England (Taylor v. State, 49 Fla. 69, 38 South. Rep. 380), and the amount involved being sufficiently large, and the parties being before the court, all 'bona fide transitory actions are within its power to hear and determine.
Having held the defendant properly before the court, we are not called upon to apply the effect of the suing out the writ of error herein as a general appearance. Drew Lumber Co. v. Walter, 45 Fla. 252, 34 South. Rep. 244.
For the error in refusing to strike the first three pleas-the judgment is reversed.
There was no error in denying the motion to quash the service of the writ and the assignments of error on behalf of the defendant are not sustained.
The costs of all the appellate proceedings will be taxed against the defendant, The Ellis-Young Company.
Shackleford, C. J., and Whitfield, J., concur.
Taylor, Hocker and Parkhill, JJ., concur in the opinion.