Court Opinion

ID: 3881781
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2016-07-06 09:13:02.307422+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T07:41:57.185519
License: Public Domain

July 27, 1917. The opinion of the Court was delivered by
The appeal is from an order of the Circuit Court, and by the appellant's admission, though there are four exceptions, there is only one question to be decided; and it is this: Are the signature and seal of the clerk of the Circuit Court necessary to the validity of a summons? It was expressly decided in 1884 that a summons does not need to be signed and sealed by the clerk. Genobles v. West, 23 S.C. 157. It would be unwarrantable now to hold the contrary, and thereby to undo much that has been done in these 30 years gone. The contrary was not decided in Wren v. Johnson,62 S.C. 533, 40 S.E. 937; all there held is that a summons "is a means supplied by the law to the assertion of jurisdiction." It does not appear if the summons in that case was or was not signed and sealed by the clerk.
The appellant, though, rests his case on the Constitution and the statute. Const., art. V, sec. 31; section 1319, Code of Laws 1912; section 4217, Code of Laws 1912. These instruments do specify writs and processes; they do not specify summons. And the Constitution only requires that writs shall be attested by the clerk of Court; it does not define "writ." The appellant, though, says a summons is a writ, and, therefore, the Constitution did in effect specify summons.
The words "writ" and "process" are generic, and they constitute a part of the law's history. 3 Blackstone 271. The Code of Procedure, in effect, abolished the formal writs and processes which obtained aforetime, and which were issued by an officer, and, therefore, under his hand and seal, to a debtor upon the prayer of a creditor. That instrument prescribes that an action may be commenced by summons (section 177), and it prescribes the contents of a summons (section 178), and it does not require the summons to be *Page 534 
signed and sealed by the clerk; it does require it to be subscribed by the plaintiff or his attorney. The Code of Procedure does not specify writs or processes; it does provide for the preparation and service of a paper to bring a person before the Court, and it calls that paper a summons. The appellant cannot invalidate it by calling the instrument a writ.
The order below is affirmed.