Court Opinion

ID: 8017586
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-09-09 02:06:36.475279+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:36:27.215725
License: Public Domain

VALLIANT, J.
— This is a suit under section 650, Revised Statutes 1899, to quiet • title to the north half of section 25, township 31, range 4 west, in Shannon county.
It was agreed at the trial that Eugene F. Sawyer and wife and James W. Cummer and wife were the common source of title. Plaintiff introduced in evidence a deed from those parties duly executed dated *501December 29, 1906, and duly recorded. Plaintiff then rested.
Defendants introduced in evidence a sheriff’s deed under special execution on a judgment for taxes against the land, rendered March 10, 1897, in the circuit court of Shannon county. In the suit in which the judgment was rendered the State on relation of the collector of revenue of Shannon County was plaintiff, and S. L. Nichols, James Buck, Joseph S. Tam, James W. Cummer, Mary B. Cummer, Eugene F. Sawyer and Kate M. Sawyer were defendants. There was no service of process in the case and no appearance of defendants, but an order of publication against them as nonresidents, and proof of publication filed. The order of publication was made by the clerk in vacation and recites that the plaintiff’s petition states “among other things that the defendants are non-residents of the State of Missouri and cannot be summoned in this action by the ordinary process of law.”
Plaintiff in rebuttal introduced in evidence a duly certified transcript of the record in the case, including the petition on which the order of publication was based. The only statement in the petition in reference to the residence of the defendants was as follows:
“Plaintiff further states that the defendant-non-resident-of the State of Missouri, so that the ordinary process of law cannot be served upon-.”
The court rendered a decree finding among other things “that the allegation of non-residence of the defendants in said tax suits as the same appears from the certified copy of said petition in said tax suit is a sufficient allegation of the non-residence of the defendants in said tax suit to authorize the clerk of the court in which said tax suit was filed to issue an order of publication thereon at the filing of said tax suit.” The court then decreed that the defendants T. T. Springer and Charles E. Riggs were the sole owners of the legal and equitable title to the land in suit and the plaintiff *502had no title or interest in it. From that decree the plaintiff appeals.
The only question in the case is, was the statement in the petition in the tax suit sufficient to justify the order of publication?
The process by which what the law calls constructive notice is given, and by which a man’s property may be seized and sold under a judgment rendered in a suit of which he had in fact no notice at all, is a harsh process, it is allowed by law only from necessity, and when a plaintiff would avail himself of it he should make a strict compliance with the law that allows it.
The statute under which the plaintiff in the tax suit obtained the order of publication now in question, section 2022, Revised Statutes 1899, now section 1770, Revised Statutes 1909, says: “if the plaintiff or other person for him shall allege in his petition, or at the time of filing same, or at any time thereafter shall file an affidavit stating, that part or all of the defendants are non-residents of the State, .... the court in which said suit is brought, or in vacation the clerk thereof, shall make an order directed to the nonresidents,” etc. In the next section it' is provided that if “part of the defendants are residents of the State, process shall be issued against them as in other cases.”
Under that statute, if a plaintiff seeks to reach his adversary by publication in- a newspaper on the ground that he is a non-resident, he must state in his petition or affidavit in unequivocal terms that the defendant is a non-resident, and if there are several defendants and some are residents and others non-residents he must name the non-residents. On reading the petition in the tax suit in question it is clear that a printed form was used in preparing it and the pleader forgot to fill the blanks in the clause relating to the non-residence of the defendants. There are seven persons named as defendants, but it is not stated that they are all non*503residents and there is no statement that either or if either which one of them is a non-resident.
That statement in the petition was not sufficient to authorize the order of publication and therefore the order and its publication were not sufficient to give the court jurisdiction of the defendants in that suit or of their interest in the land.
The judgment is reversed and the cause remanded to the circuit court with directions to enter a decree adjudging the plaintiff the sole owner in fee of the land in suit.
All concur.