Savings and Loan Society v. Thompson
Before: Sawyer
Synopsis
A Month.—The month contemplated by the statutes of this State is a calendar not a lunar month.
Publication of Summons.—A publication of a summons weekly against a nonresident defendant, commencing on the 10th day of January, and ending on the 9th day of April, is a publication of three full calendar months, and the first day of the forty within which the defendant is required to answer is the 10 th of April.
Idem.—If the last day of the publication of a summons is in the same week in which the three months expires, the publication is sufficient to give the Court jurisdiction, although this day is less than three months from the first day of publication.
Publication of Summons on Sunday.—If some of the publications of a summons, including the last, are made on Sunday, in the regular issues of the paper, it does not vitiate the service.
By the Court, Sawyer, J.: The only question in this case is, whether a summons was published “ once a week,” not less than “ three months,” within the meaning of the provisions of the thirty-first section of the Practice Act. It was published on the 10th, 15th, 22d and 29th of January; the 5th, 12th, 19th and 26th of February ; the 5th, 12th, 19th and 26th of March, and the 2d and 9th of April, 1865, the first publication being on the 10th of January and the last on the 9th of April.
The month contemplated by the statute is a calendar, not a lunar month. (Sprague v. Norway, 31 Cal. 173.) This is conceded.
The five hundred thirtieth section of the Practice Act has no application. There is no time “ within which an' act is to be done,” within the meaning of that section.
The defendant being a non-resident of the State, the summons must be published “ at least once a week,” and the publication “ shall not be less than three months.” From the 10th of January to the 9th of April, inclusive, are three full calendar months. We can no more include the 9th of January, or the 10th of April, in the intervening three calendar months, than we can get two Sundays or two Saturdays into one week. The publication was made on the 10th of January and on the 9th of April, and once in every intervening week, making in all a publication in each of fourteen consecutive weeks. The period of publication, then, covered the entire period of three calendar months. The publication, therefore, could not be “ less than three months.” If the language of the statute had been, that “ the summons shall be published daily, and the publication shall not be less than one month,” and a summons had been published on every day in the month of January, for example, we apprehend that no one would contend that it had not been published a full*month. The cases cited are not upon precisely similar provisions, and are not in point. Neither does the point decided in any one of them sustain the precise view maintained by appellant. The [351]cases arise upon notices of Sheriff’s sales, notices in insolvent cases, etc., under statutory provisions requiring notice to be published “ weekly for six weeks,” “ three months,” and the like, as the case may be, before some act to be done on a designated day of which notice is given. In no one of the cases was it held that the “six weeks” or “three months ” must elapse between the first and last publication, or that the notice had not been published a sufficient number of times, or to a sufficiently late day. No such question was in any of the cases. The difficulty was, not that the notice had not been published the full number of times, or to a sufficiently late day, but that sufficient time had not elapsed between the first publication and the time appointed for doing the thing of which notice was given. Take for example the case of Early v. Doe, 16 How. U. S. S. Ct. 611, which was a tax sale. The statute required notice of the sale to be published “ once in each week for at least twelve successive weeks.” The day of sale appointed by the notice was the 15th of November, 1848. The first and last publication were on the 26th of August and the 15th of November—the day of sale; and the Court in their calculation include both days. From the 26th of August to the day of sale and last publication—the 15th of November— there were but eighty-two days—not twelve full weeks, or eighty-four days. Now the difficulty was, as stated by Mr. Justice Nelson, not that the notice had not been published a sufficient number of times, or continued to a sufficiently late period; but that twelve full weeks notice had not been given —that is, twelve weeks from the first publication to the day appointed for the sale, which happened in this instance to be the last day of publication also. (Ib. 615-16.) But suppose the day appointed for the sale had been the 18th of November, instead of the 15th, and the publication had been precisely the same as it was—the last falling on the 15th, and that it was in the same week with the 18th—there can be no doubt that the sale would have been upheld. There would, then, clearly have been twelve full weeks notice from the first publication to the day of sale, and the notice would have been
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