Armstrong v. Poole

5 S.E. 257, 30 W. Va. 666, 1888 W. Va. LEXIS 8
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 4, 1888
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 5 S.E. 257 (Armstrong v. Poole) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Armstrong v. Poole, 5 S.E. 257, 30 W. Va. 666, 1888 W. Va. LEXIS 8 (W. Va. 1888).

Opinion

Snyder, Judge:

The judgment sought to be set aside by this suit was affirmed by this Court, September 26th, 1885, in the case of Poole v. Dilworth, 26 W. Va. 583. The facts shown by the record are as follows : John Dilworth and John J. Dilworth, by their joint obligation, dated May 14th, 1873, bound them: selves to pay to Eliza A. M. Litzinger and James Rogers $250.00. This bond was in June, 1873, assigned to Patrick F. Poole, who afterwards brought an action thereon before a justice of Taylor county. The summons issued against both the obligors in the bond but was served upon John Dilworth only, the return showing that the other obligor was not found. On June 3d, 1882, the justice gave judgment against the defendant, John Dilworth, for $365.00, the amount of the bond and costs. John Dilworth executed an appeal-bond, with Adolphus Armstrong as his surety, and thereupon obtained an appeal of said action to the Circuit Court of Taylor county. The case was tried de novo by the Circuit Court, and on March 27th, 1884, it rendered a judgment in favor of the plaintiff, Poole, against the defendant, John Dilworth, and said Armstrong, as his surety on the appeal-bond, for $390.00, with damages and costs. From this judgment the said Dilworth and Armstrong-brought a writ of error to this Court, which on September 26th, 1885, affirmed the judgment of the Circuit Court., as before stated. After the judgment had thus been affirmed, Poole caused an execution to be issued thereon against said Dilworth and Armstrong. The latter paid $125.00 on the execution. Dilworth having died, Armstrong alone filed his bill in the said Circuit Court against said Patrick F. Poole, Dilworth’s administrator, and others, and on December 8th, 1885, obtained an injunction thereon restraining the said Poole from collecting from the plaintiff the amount specified in said execution, or enforcing the payment of said bond of $250.00. Poole demurred to and answered the bill, and, on his motion, the court, by its decree of March 30th, 1886, dissolved the injunction; and having ascertained the amount [668]*668of the judgment enjoined, including principal, interest, damages and costs, as required by the statute, to be $4-29.87 as of that date, ordered an execution to issue against the plaintiff, Armstrong, for that sum and the costs of the suit. On April 7,1886, the plaintiff moved the court to reinstate his injunction, but this motion was denied. From these two decrees the plaintiff obtained this appeal.

The plaintiff alleges two grounds in his bill for the injunction. The first is that there is not, and never was, a judgment against John Dilworth, because the bond upon which the alleged judgment was obtained is the joint bond of John and John J. Dilworth; that no valid judgment could be rendered upon such bond against one obligor alone; and that therefore the alleged judgment against John Dilworth is not. in law a j udgment, but a mere cognovit actionem, or interlocutory order, dependent upon the final judgment to be rendered for or against both the obligors in said bond. In support of this ground, the decision of this Court in Hoffman v. Bircher, 22 W. Va. 537, is cited and relied upon. In that case both the obligors were served with process, and in the opinion of the Court emphasis is given to this fact; and the plain inference therefrom is that, if the service had been only upon the defendant against whom the judgment was rendered in that case, it would have been declared a valid and final judgment. Not only is such the implied decision in that case, but such is the positive requirement of our statute, which is in these words: “ Where, in an action or suit against two or more defendants, the process is served on part of them, the plaintiff may proceed to judgment as to any so served, and either discontinue it as to the others, or from time to time, as process is served as to such others, proceed to judgment as to them until judgment be obtained against all.” Section 52, ch. 125, Code; Bank v. Evans, 9 W. Va. 373; Snyder v. Snyder, Id. 415; Carlon v. Ruffner, 12 W. Va. 297. In the case before us, John J. Dilworth, the other joint obligor, was never served with process, and he did not appear, nor was he in any manner brought before the court. It is therefore clear, under (he statute and the decisions above cited, that the judgment was legally and properly rendered against John Dilworth, the only obligor served [669]*669with process. But, aside from the conclusion just announced, the question whether this is a valid and binding judgment or not is res judicata, and earn not be questioned or assailed upon the ground here invoked, in any court, either of inferior or appellate jurisdiction. The facts upon which this judgment is now assailed, appeared in the record, and were all before this Court at the time it affirmed said judgment. In Campbell v. Campbell, 22 Grat. 649, Moncure, J., in delivering the opinion of the Court, after reviewing. all the prior Virginia cases on the subject, says, on page 669: “ These decisions seem conclusively to show that after the end of the term of this Court at which a judgment or decree may be rendered by it, or, at all events, after such judgment or decree has been certified to the court below, it is too late to have the case reheard in this Court upon any ground of error, of law or fact, apparent upon the face of such judgment or decree, or of the record on which it is rendered. Whether the rule be founded on principle, or be merely a rule of practice, it is alike absolute and inflexible. Public policy, if not necessity, requires that it should be strictly enforced, even in cases of greatest individual hardship.” And in the same opinion it is declared, at page 671, that “ all the judgments and decrees of this Court are final, and none of them are interlocutory, at least when they (as they almost a]ways do) dispose of the whole case involved in the appeal, even though the appeal be from an interlocutory decree, and even though the case be remanded to the court below for further proceedings to be had therein.” The doctrine announced here has been strictly adhered to and followed by this Court. Newman v. Mollohan, 10 W. Va. 488; Hall v. Bank, 15 W. Va. 323. There being no power or authority to review a judgment affirmed by this Court in a direct proceeding to rehear it, a fortiori there can be no power or right to review or set aside such judgment in a collateral suit by bill in equity in an inferior court.

The other ground for the injunction is that the plaintiff, Armstrong, is simply the surety of the two obligors in the bond upon which the judgment sought to be enjoined was recovered ; that said obligors are insolvent, and that there are funds under the control of the court to pay said judgment; [670]*670and therefore Poole, the judgment creditor, should be compelled to resort to these funds before proceeding against the plaintiff. The facts alleged in the bill to support this ground are that the bond upon which the judgment was rendered is one of several deferred payments upon a tract of land, and that there is a vendor’s lien retained to secure said payments. The answer denies that there is any fund in court, or any lien or security for any part of this judgment, and refers to the record of the case of Poole v. Dilworth, which is made a part of the answer, to show that the vendor’s lien mentioned in the bill can never be made available as a security for any part of the judgment here in question, and that the land has been resold, and the proceeds are insufficient to pay off the other purchase-money bonds.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Douglas Milling & Power Co. v. Rickey
217 P. 590 (Nevada Supreme Court, 1923)
Conley v. Anderson
164 S.W. 985 (Texas Supreme Court, 1913)
Post v. W. H. Bailey & Co.
69 S.E. 910 (West Virginia Supreme Court, 1910)
American Waterworks & Guarantee Co. v. Home Water Co.
115 F. 171 (U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Eastern Arkansas, 1902)
State ex rel. Wolferman v. Superior Court
36 P. 443 (Washington Supreme Court, 1894)
Ferguson v. Millender
9 S.E. 38 (West Virginia Supreme Court, 1889)
Ward v. Churn
18 Va. 801 (Supreme Court of Virginia, 1868)
Carrington v. Didier, Norvell & Co.
8 Va. 260 (Supreme Court of Virginia, 1851)
Smith's Adm'r v. Charlton's Adm'r
7 Gratt. 425 (Supreme Court of Virginia, 1851)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
5 S.E. 257, 30 W. Va. 666, 1888 W. Va. LEXIS 8, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/armstrong-v-poole-wva-1888.