DocketNumber: No. 41597
Citation Numbers: 239 Miss. 621, 124 So. 2d 697, 1960 Miss. LEXIS 331
Judges: Arrington, Ethridge, Gillespie, Kyle, McGehee
Filed Date: 11/21/1960
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/19/2024
This is an appeal by the Mid-South Pipeline Contractors, Inc. from a default judgment rendered by the Circuit Court of Lauderdale County in favor of the appellee, Citizens National Bank of Meridian, in the sum of $24,752.03.
Tbe said judgment debtors elected not to give a supersedeas bond for tbe appeal to tbis Court, and, therefore, on June 23, 1959, tbe Appellee-Bank, through its attorney, filed a suggestion of garnishment in tbe Circuit Court of Lauderdale County requesting* that a writ of garnishment be issued against tbe said Mid-South Pipeline Contractors, Inc. Tbis suggestion of garnishment correctly referred to tbe judgment rendered in favor of tbe Appellee-Bank in tbe Circuit Court of Lauderdale County and named tbe said Mr. and Mrs. II. Gr. Irby, Jr. as tbe judgment debtors.
A copy of tbe suggestion for tbe writ of garnishment was signed by tbe Appellee-Bank by its attorney, and was marked filed by tbe clerk of the circuit court on tbe date of tbe issuance thereof. Tbe writ of garnishment wbicb was issued on tbe same day was under tbe signature of tbe clerk of tbe circuit court and bore tbe seal thereof. Tbe writ of garnishment recited that tbe Appellee-Bank bad recovered a judgment in “county court” on tbe “23rd day of April 1959 for tbe sum of $24,123.78, plus interest from April 23, 1959, against H. Gr. Irby, Jr. and Mrs. H. Gr. Irby, Jr.,” and that tbe said judgment bad not been satisfied, and that tbe Ap-pellee-Bank having made tbe proper suggestion for a writ of garnishment against tbe said Mid-South Pipeline Contractors, Inc., tbe said garnishee was summoned to appear “in said court” on tbe 5th day of October 1959, then and there to answer tbe said writ of garnishment as required by law.
It will thus be noted that tbe writ of garnishment erroneously stated that tbe Appellee-Bank bad recovered judgment “in county court”, whereas, in truth and in
It is to be noted that the President and Secretary of the Appellant-Pipeline Contractors are the same persons against whom the original judgment was entered in the Circuit Court of Lauderdale County, Mississippi, and they had actual notice of the judgment referred to in the writ and personal knowledge of the court in which the cause was pending, since they participated in the case and appealed the decision from the circuit court to the State Supreme Court, where the same was affirmed.
The Appellant-Pipeline Contractors ignored the writ of garnishment and filed no answer thereto in any
The Circuit Court of Lauderdale County remained in session until November 7, 1959, and during the remainder of that term of court the Appellant-Pipeline Contractors made no request to have set aside the default judgment as rendered against it.
The appellant did not file an assignment of error herein within the thirty days required by Rule 6 of the Revised Rules of this Court, but we have concluded to render our decision on the merits of the case instead of on this oversight on the part of the appellant to comply with the Rules of this Court.
The Appellant-Pipeline Contractors contend that the default judgment of the lower court rendered on October 6, 1959, against them as garnishee is void solely because the writ of garnishment on which the judgment was based, commanded the appellant to appear in the county court instead of the circuit court to answer the said writ of garnishment.
Section 1844 of the Miss. Code of 1942 provides that the style of process shall be “The State of Mississippi” and that it shall be issued and signed by the clerk of the court, with the seal of his office affixed, and shall bear the date on which it is issued. The writ of garnishment in this case was correctly styled “The State of Mississippi”, was issued and signed by the clerk of the circuit court, bore the date on which it was issued, and the seal of the circuit court was affixed to the writ.
Section 1848 of the Mississippi Code of 1942 provides that process shall be made returnable to the first day of the term of court.
Section 1613 of the Miss. Code of 1942, as amended, provides that the County Court of Lauderdale County, Mississippi, shall begin its terms on the Second Monday of each month, which, in this case would have been on the 12th day of October 1959. Examination of Section 1404 of the Miss. Code of 1942, as amended, will reveal that a term of the Circuit Court of Lauderdale County, Mississippi, begins on the First Monday of October, which, in this case, was on the 5th day of October 1959.
Section 1845 of the Miss. Code of 1942 provides that the process shall command an officer to summon the defendant to appear and answer on the return date. The writ of garnishment contained the proper command.
It can, therefore, be seen that the writ of garnishment in this case substantially complied with the law, and it has been the law in Mississippi for many years that ‘ ‘ no strict adherence to form is absolutely necessary in summoning a defendant to answer a suit instituted against him.” Hawkins & Company v. McAlister, 86 Miss. 84, 38 So. 225.
The principal purpose of process is to give to the party to whom it is addressed notice of the proceeding to be defended. 42 Am. Jur. 36, Process, Section 3. The writ of garnishment in the instant case served that purpose.
Moreover, the clerical error was apparent on the face of the writ. It could have been amended at any time if the attention of the lower court had been called to the same. Kelly v. Harrison, 69 Miss. 856, 12 So. 261.
In the Kelly case, supra, the summons was issued on December 7, 1883, and through error, the clerk showed
Again, -where the defendant is not misled, as to the court in which the proceedings are pending, he has no just cause of complaint. The appellant doesn’t even contend in its brief that it was misled in the instant case. See Dunn v. Sims, 218 Miss. 227, 67 So. 2d 261, wherein this Court held that even though the summons commanded the defendant to appear before the “judge of the circuit court” where it should have commanded that he appear before the circuit court, the defendant was required to look further to determine what other language was used in the process to identify the court. Even a casual glance at the writ of garnishment of the instant case reveals that the seal of the circuit court was affixed and not the seal of the county court; and that the amount of money mentioned in the writ, for which the Appellee-Bank had recovered a judgment, was clearly in excess of the jurisdiction of the county court. Then, too, the writ was returnable on the 5th day of October 1959, and under the law the appellant knew that this was the first day of the term of the Circuit Court of Lauderdale County, and not the first day of a term of the county court.
We are therefore of the opinion that the circuit court was correct in overruling the motion of the garnishee to set aside the default judgment rendered against the
Affirmed.