Austin v. Ramsey

3 Tenn. Ch. R. 118
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedApril 15, 1876
StatusPublished

This text of 3 Tenn. Ch. R. 118 (Austin v. Ramsey) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Austin v. Ramsey, 3 Tenn. Ch. R. 118 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1876).

Opinion

The Ci-iaNCellor:

Bill filed October 7, 1875, to be permitted to make the defences of usury and payment to a note after a judgment rendered thereon by a justice of the peace in favor of the defendant on August 2, 1878. The cause assigned for not making these defences before the justice is, that complainant did attend on the day set for trial, “ with his proof,” prepared to show that he had paid the note sued on; but the plaintiff did not appear, or any one to rejiresent her, and the justice postponed the trial to some other day, as complainant understood, of which he was to have due notice. “Complainant went home satisfied with this arrangement, and, as he heard nothing more about the matter, he supposed the defendant became satisfied that he owed her nothing on the note, and had concluded to prosecute the suit no further.” Within a few days, an execution has been for the first time issued on the judgment, and was the first intimation received by the complainant that a judgment had been rendered.

Upon the case thus made by the bill, the remedy was clearly by certiorari and supersedeas at law. Spivy v. Latham, 8 Humph. 703. But the defendant has, by her answer, expressly waived “ all objections to the jurisdiction of the court,” and taken issue with the complainant, both upon the causes assigned for not making defence, and upon the merits of the defences.

The causes assigned are, in brief, that the complainant did attend on the day fixed for trial before the justice, and the defendant did not; that the cause was continued to some other day, of which complainant was to have notice; that no such notice was ever given him, and he had no knowledge of the judgment until within the last few days.

The complainant gives his own deposition, and states that he attended on the day of trial, without any proof, and the [120]*120justice, who had the notes with the credits thereon, told him there was a balance of $88 due, and the judgment is rendered for this balance. Complainant adds, in his testimony-in chief, that he said to the justice he had some other receipts, went home, found' a receipt for $100, and sent it to the justice, “ and gave the matter no further attention.”' In his cross-examination, he admits that the justice gave him credit for the $100 evidenced by the receipt found, in arriving at the balance of $88 for which the judgment was. rendered. It is clear, therefore, that on the day of trial the justice agreed to allow the credit thus claimed, upon production of the receipt, and made his calculation accordingly ; and that complainant then knew there was a balance still due from him upon the note, as to which, to use his own words, he “gave the matter no further attention.” The complainant’s answer to the fifteenth cross-interrogatory is in these words : “ The case was set for trial twice. The first time, I was present and had the cause postponed that I might find my receipts. Some time after that, Squire Gray (the justice) wrote to me, telling me the day he was going1 to enter judgment. That day, I did not attend, but sent the-receipt for $100 by my son.” It thus appears from his own testimony that the continuance given by the justice was at. his (complainant’s) instance, to find receipts, and that he did have notice of the “ other day ” to which the trial was adjourned, and did not attend. The equity of the bill, fully met by the answer, is disproved by the complainant himself. He has, thus far, no status in this court.

The bill only insists that the judgment is erroneous and unjust, and that complainant should be allowed to make-defences which, by reason of the causes assigned, he was prevented from making without fault on his part. Iiis own testimony disproves his causes, and convicts him of neglect, in not making his defences at law. So far as the case made by the bill is concerned, the complainant is out of court. His learned counsel, however, insists that the facts disclosed [121]*121by the answer show that the justice’s judgment is void, and, therefore, he is let into his defences. The answer does say that the justice granted the complainant a continuance until August 12th, to produce further receipts ; that complainant failed to appear, and that the justice, at his leisure, — that is to say, on August 29th, — entered up the judgment. But this statement is confessedly upon information, not knowledge, and the date given of August 29th is owing to a misreading, by the defendant’s counsel, of the judgment itself. The original judgment is produced, and shows that it was rendered on the “2d” of August, the “d” after the figure 2 being so written as to look like the figure 9. The error is, however, obvious upon inspection. A defendant cannot be allowed to be prejudiced by an innocent mistake of such a character. Correcting this erroneous statement of the answer, by the record, there is nothing in the answer to show that the judgment is void.

It is next urged that the justice himself states in his-deposition that he waited upon the complainant about two months after August 2d, the day set for the trial, and then gave judgment as of that date, “which,” he adds, “I. had notified the parties I would, a,t the commencement.” This testimony, without any issue made by the bill upon the validity of the judgment, was irrelevant. The court cannot notice matter, however clearly proved, of which-there is no allegation or issue in the pleadings. Sheratz v. Nicodemus, 7 Yerg. 13 ; Buffalow v. Buffalow, 2 Ired. Eq. 115; Gordon v. Gordon, 3 Swanst. 472; Bedford v. Williams, 5 Coldw. 207 ; Browning v. Pratt, 2 Dev. Eq. 49 ; Powers v. Mansfield, 6 Sim. 565 ; Vansciver v. Bryan, 2 Beas. 434; Tripp v. Vincent, 3 Barb. Ch. 614. And such evidence must, ex necessitate, be generally left for action upon the hearing of the cause. Osmond v. Tindall, Jac. 628 ; White v. Tussell, 19 Ves. 127. The rule is not adopted simply for the purpose of preventing surprise, but of deterring parties from an attempt at imposition. Eor,. [122]*122if the evidence runs ahead of the allegation, there is reason to consider it false, as every one is presumed to allege his cause as strongly in his own favor as he can, consistently with the truth. Willis v. Peterson, 3 Jones Eq. 341.

If the facts were admissible, the question raised would be one of grave difficulty. In Hubbard v. Birdwell, 11 Humph. 229, the decision is that a formal judgment in the -absence of the defendant, and without notice to him, and without any trial of the matters in dispute, which is antedated, is void; and there is a strong intimation that the fictitious proceedings, which, by antedating, appear on their face to be what in fact they are not, are inadmissible even in cases before justices of the peace. But in West v. Williamson, 1 Swan, 277, and Glover v. Holman, 3 Heisk. 519, the decisions are that, where the justice has jurisdiction, a judgment rendered on a different day from that set for trial, and without notice to the defendant, although irregular, is not void. In the doubtful state of the authorities, I am not inclined to treat as void a judgment rendered, after continuance for an indefinite period granted at the in■stance of the defendant himself, upon notice of the day when it would be rendered, merely because it was ante•dated.

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Related

Tripp v. Vincent
3 Barb. Ch. 613 (New York Court of Chancery, 1846)
Smith v. Price
49 Tenn. 293 (Tennessee Supreme Court, 1871)
Glover v. Holman
50 Tenn. 519 (Tennessee Supreme Court, 1871)

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Bluebook (online)
3 Tenn. Ch. R. 118, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/austin-v-ramsey-tennctapp-1876.