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Edwards v. Gross

Supreme Court of Wisconsin
May 6, 1958
90 N.W.2d 142 (Wis. 1958)

Summary

In Edwards v. Gross (1958), 4 Wis.2d 90, 90 N.W.2d 142, this court held that a counteraffidavit in which the affiant stated she verily believed certain matters to be a fact actually stated ultimate facts or legal conclusions rather than evidentiary facts and did not comply with the statute.

Summary of this case from McChain v. City of Fond du Lac

Opinion

April 8, 1958 —

May 6, 1958.

APPEALS from two separate orders of the municipal court of the city of Beloit, Rock county: ARTHUR L. LUEBKE, judge. One order affirmed; one order reversed.

For the appellants there was a brief and oral argument by Crosby H. Summers of Janesville.

For the respondent the cause was submitted on the brief of Kevin J. Keenan of Beloit.


Action to recover damages for personal injuries sustained in an automobile accident. The defendants were Kenneth Gross, the owner of one of the automobiles involved in the collision; Izola Gross, his wife, the driver of the automobile owned by Kenneth Gross; and the Iowa National Mutual Insurance Company, the insurer of the Gross automobile.

The complaint alleged that the defendant Izola Gross collided with an automobile in which the plaintiff was riding as a passenger, and that the collision was caused by the negligence of Mrs. Gross. The complaint further alleged that Kenneth Gross was the owner of the automobile driven by Mrs. Gross and that the Insurance Company had, prior to the date of the collision, entered into a contract of insurance with Kenneth Gross by the terms of which Izola Gross was an additional insured as she was operating the automobile with his permission. The complaint further alleged that the defendants Kenneth Gross and Izola Gross were residents of South Beloit, Illinois.

Separate answers were served and filed by each of the defendants. The answers of Kenneth Gross and Izola Gross denied any negligence on the part of Izola Gross and denied that any conduct on her part was a proximate cause of the damages sustained by the plaintiff. Each of said defendants further pleaded as an affirmative defense that no notice of injury or complaint in the action was served upon or received by the defendants within two years from the date of the accident, which occurred on July 24, 1955. Each of said answers alleged that Izola Gross was driving said automobile for her own personal purposes, which were of a social nature and not as agent, servant, or employee of the defendant Kenneth Gross. The answer of the Insurance Company alleged that it was a foreign corporation; that this policy of insurance issued to Kenneth Gross was an Illinois contract; that said policy contained a no-action clause, and that the statutory law of Illinois did not provide for direct liability between an injured person and the Insurance Company, and that the statutory law of Illinois did not provide for the joinder of the Insurance Company in the action.

Thereafter separate motions for summary judgment were made on behalf of each of the defendants. The motions were supported by affidavits. No objection was made to the granting of the motion for summary judgment on the part of the defendant Insurance Company, and no appeal has been taken from the order granting said motion.

The record discloses that service of a summons and complaint in this action was made on the commissioner of the motor vehicle department on the 23d of July, 1957, and that on the same date he mailed true and correct copies of the original summons and complaint by registered mail to Kenneth Gross and Izola Gross at 132 South Eighth street, South Beloit, Illinois. Defendants alleged that said copies were not received by them until July 25, 1957. The trial court held that this constituted good service on the defendants Kenneth Gross and Izola Gross, and further that the presumption of agency that existed because of the ownership of the automobile by Kenneth Gross could not be overcome by an affidavit and motion for summary judgment. Separate orders were entered on the 24th of October, 1957, denying the separate motions of Kenneth Gross and Izola Gross for summary judgment, and those defendants appealed separately from said orders.


So far as the defendant Izola Gross is concerned, no question is raised as to the service of the summons in the action. The sole question to be determined is whether the service of the complaint which was attached to the summons was a sufficient compliance with the provisions of sec. 330.19(5), Stats. In brief this section of the statutes provides that notice of injury shall be given to the defendant within two years from the date of the accident. Said statute further provides that when an action shall be brought and a complaint actually served within the two-year period the notice of injury need not be served.

It is the contention of Izola Gross that sec. 85.05(6), Stats., providing for service on the commissioner of the motor vehicle department, refers only to process and that the complaint served is not process. In Oldenburg v. Hartford Accident Indemnity Co. 266 Wis. 68, 62 N.W.2d 574, it was held that a notice of injury alone could not be served on a nonresident defendant under the provisions of then sec. 85.05(3) as it was not a process. However, in the present case, the issue is governed by the provisions of sec. 262.08, part of which reads as follows:

"PERSONAL SERVICE ON INDIVIDUALS AND ITS EQUIVALENT. For personal service or its equivalent, the summons, and the accompanying complaint or notice aforesaid, if any, shall be served by delivering a copy thereof as follows:

"(5) In the situations specified in sec. 85.05(6), service in accordance with the procedure specified therein shall be the equivalent of personal service."

Thus, the legislature has authorized the service of the complaint upon a nonresident motorist who has been involved in an automobile accident in Wisconsin when served with the summons, by service upon the commissioner of the motor vehicle department. In Sorenson v. Stowers, 251 Wis. 398, 29 N.W.2d 512, the court was dealing with a slightly different statute (sec. 85.05(3), Stats. 1941), but with a similar fact situation. In that case the defendant was a nonresident motorist. An accident occurred on August 6, 1939, on a highway in Milwaukee county. On August 4, 1941, the summons and complaint were prepared and forwarded to the commissioner of motor vehicles. On August 5, 1941, the plaintiff's attorneys mailed to the nonresident defendant at his last-known address a copy of the summons and complaint. The last-known address of the defendant was Warren, Michigan. The papers were returned to the said attorneys with a notation showing delivery to the defendant was not made for the reason that delivery was refused and the further reason that the addressee had moved and left no address. The court there held that actual notice to a nonresident defendant in an automobile damage action is not essential to due process where notice and copy of process has been sent by mail in accordance with statutory provisions.

Thus, in the present case there was service upon Izola Gross within the two-year period and the trial court correctly denied her motion for summary judgment.

As to the defendant Kenneth Gross we have a different situation. There was no allegation in the complaint that Izola Gross was the agent of Kenneth Gross. In support of the motion for summary judgment there were filed the affidavits of both Izola Gross and Kenneth Gross that at the time of the accident Izola Gross was driving her husband's automobile upon a social errand of her own and not on any business of her husband; that he had no interest in the use to which the automobile was being put, and obtained no benefit from such use, nor was such use made or pursued at his request or for his benefit.

In opposition to the motion for summary judgment the plaintiff filed an affidavit in which she stated, with reference to the question of agency, that she verily believed that at the time of the collision Izola Gross was driving and using said automobile as an agent of her husband, Kenneth Gross. Sec. 270.635, Stats., dealing with summary judgments, states that the affidavits must be made by persons who have knowledge thereof and set forth evidentiary facts. The statement by the plaintiff in her affidavit was the statement of an ultimate fact or legal conclusion rather than an evidentiary fact, and therefore does not comply with the requirements of the statute. The affidavit is silent as to any evidentiary facts upon which the plaintiff formed her belief.

The trial court felt that there was a presumption of agency because the automobile was owned by Kenneth Gross. There is such a presumption of agency. Enea v. Pfister, 180 Wis. 329, 192 N.W. 1018; Laurent v. Plain, 229 Wis. 75, 281 N.W. 660; Hansberry v. Dunn, 230 Wis. 626, 284 N.W. 556; and Sevey v. Jones, 235 Wis. 109, 292 N.W. 436. The trial court further held that this presumption could not be overcome solely by an affidavit supporting the motion for summary judgment as the evidentiary facts in the defendant's affidavits were peculiarly within the knowledge of the defendant and should be open to challenge and possible refutation upon cross-examination.

In this respect we cannot agree with the trial court. The evidentiary facts contained in the defendants' affidavits did overcome the presumption of agency and entitled the defendant Kenneth Gross to summary judgment unless the plaintiff's affidavit raised issues sufficient to entitle her to a trial thereon. There was no attempt to take an adverse examination of the defendants in South Beloit, although such procedure is authorized by statute. Had that been done and had there been an inconsistent or ambiguous statement, then the plaintiff could have followed the procedure suggested in the following words in Leuchtenberg v. Hoeschler, 271 Wis. 151, 158, 72 N.W.2d 758:

"If in the instant case an affidavit had been filed by defendant, or one of his counsel, stating that an issue was raised as to the time when Evenson made the alteration in the offer to purchase, and that defendant intended at the trial to cross-examine plaintiff with respect to the hereinbefore-quoted ambiguous answer given by him in his adverse examination, it would have been the duty of the trial court to have denied the plaintiff's application for summary judgment."

Upon the record before us the motion of Kenneth Gross for summary judgment should have been granted.

By the Court. — The order denying the motion of the defendant Izola Gross for summary judgment is affirmed. The order denying the motion of the defendant Kenneth Gross for summary judgment is reversed, and cause remanded with directions to enter an order granting said motion.

HALLOWS, J., took no part.


Summaries of

Edwards v. Gross

Supreme Court of Wisconsin
May 6, 1958
90 N.W.2d 142 (Wis. 1958)

In Edwards v. Gross (1958), 4 Wis.2d 90, 90 N.W.2d 142, this court held that a counteraffidavit in which the affiant stated she verily believed certain matters to be a fact actually stated ultimate facts or legal conclusions rather than evidentiary facts and did not comply with the statute.

Summary of this case from McChain v. City of Fond du Lac

In Edwards v. Gross (1958), 4 Wis.2d 90, 95, 90 N.W.2d 142, there had been no attempt to take an adverse examination of the defendants. Again we said, also as dictum, that had such examination been taken and had an inconsistent or ambiguous statement been made therein, then the plaintiff could have followed the procedure suggested in the Leuchtenberg Case.

Summary of this case from Sadler v. Western Moulding Co.
Case details for

Edwards v. Gross

Case Details

Full title:EDWARDS, Respondent, vs. GROSS and another, Appellants

Court:Supreme Court of Wisconsin

Date published: May 6, 1958

Citations

90 N.W.2d 142 (Wis. 1958)
90 N.W.2d 142

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