Bates v. Mitchell

192 P.2d 720, 67 Ariz. 151, 1948 Ariz. LEXIS 105
CourtArizona Supreme Court
DecidedApril 12, 1948
DocketNo. 4983.
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 192 P.2d 720 (Bates v. Mitchell) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Arizona Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bates v. Mitchell, 192 P.2d 720, 67 Ariz. 151, 1948 Ariz. LEXIS 105 (Ark. 1948).

Opinion

FARLEY, Superior Judge.

This is an appeal from an order sustaining defendant’s motion to dismiss the second amended complaint and from the judgment entered thereon after plaintiffs elected to stand on the second amended complaint. The action was instituted on September 2, 1944, by the plaintiff, Frank A. Bates, as a stockholder in his own behalf and for other stockholders, and by Victor J. Hermel, a§ the Minnesotá Receiver of the American Ore Corporation. The prayer of the comr *153 plaint asked for the appointment of a receiver in Arizona to take possession of the mining property herein involved; to set aside the tax sale and deed to said property; to declare the judgment a nullity in Cause No. 6738 wherein title to said property was quieted in defendant; and to quiet title in plaintiffs to said premises.

. The defendant acquired possession of the property by virtue of a tax deed issued to the State of Arizona and by a subsequent conveyance by the State to defendant. On September 2, 1941, defendant Mitchell filed Cause No. 6738 to quiet the title to the property, based upon his tax title. The defendants in that action were the American Ore Corporation; the State of Arizona; the County of Pinal; and Ethel Griffin, County Treasurer. Service of summons was had upon Wayne Hubbs as statutory agent of the American Ore Corporation, although the corporation had had no legal existence since January 10, 1935, when its charter was revoked by order of the Arizona Corporation Commission for failure to pay the annual registration fees and file its annual report. Judgment was entered in favor of the defendant (plaintiff in that action) on September 29, 1941, quieting his title to the property.

. Plaintiffs contend that the judgment in Cause No. 6738 is null and void for want of jurisdiction because (1) the tax sale was void, and (2) service upon the American Ore Corporation was inadequate to afford the court jurisdiction.

Attention has been called to irregularities in the tax sale which plaintiffs urged affected the court’s jurisdiction. In support of that position the cases of State v. Miami Trust, 61 Ariz. 499, 152 P.2d 131, and Kincannon v. Irwin, 64 Ariz. 307, 169 P.2d 861, are cited. Those cases hold in substance that the notice of sale and the date of sale must conform to the statute and a sale not made in compliance with the statute is void because of lack of jurisdiction of the officer making the sale.

A distinction must be noted, however, in the use of the term “jurisdiction” as applied to the acts of administrative officials and as applied to the authority of courts to hear and determine actions. In no sense is the application of the term “Jurisdiction” in each case synonymous. Courts may and occasionally do determine cases based upon the erroneous exercise of “jurisdiction” or authority by administrative officials, and such determinations become res judicata. As was said in the case of Varnes v. White, 40 Ariz. 427, 12 P.2d 870, 872, “A judgment cannot be collaterally impeached because it was based on a mistake of law, any more than if based on a state of facts.” In other words, the jurisdiction of a trial court is not ordinarily derived from the authority or absence thereof of an administrative official whose acts are the basis for the litigation.

“The test of jurisdiction is whether or not the tribunal has power to enter upon the inquiry; not whether its conclusion in *154 the course of it is right or wrong. Foltz v. Railway Co., 60 F. 316, 8 C.C.A. 635; Board of Commissioners v. Platt, 79 F. 567, 25 C.C.A. 87.

“In the Foltz Case the conclusion of the court was expressed in these words:

“ ‘Jurisdiction of the subject-matter’ is the power to deal with the general abstract question, to hear the particular facts in any case relating to this question, and to determine whether or not they are sufficient to invoke the exercise of that power. It is not confined to cases in which the particular facts constitute a good cause of action, but it includes every issue within the scope of the general power vested in the court, by the law of its organization, to deal with the abstract question. Nor is this jurisdiction limited to making correct decisions. It empowers the court to determine every issue within the scope of its authority according to its own view of the law and the evidence, whether its decision is right or wrong, and every judgment or decision so rendered is final and conclusive upon the parties to it, unless reversed by writ of error or appeal, or impeaehed for fraud. (Citing cases.)” Tube City Min. Etc. Co. v. Otterson, 16 Ariz. 305, 311, 146 P. 203, 206, L.R.A.1916E, 303.

Therefore, it will be seen that only in a direct proceeding may inquiry be made as to the power of the tax officials to make the sale.

The question then arises: Is this a direct or collateral attack on the judgment in Cause No. 6738?

The answer to that query in judicial pronouncements in other jurisdictions has led through a maze of verbiage and resulted in no little confusion. This court has, however, sought to lay down a simple method to distinguish between a direct and a collateral attack'on a judgment. The case of Dockery v. Central Arizona L. & P. Co., 45 Ariz. 434, 45 P.2d 656, 660, held that “ * * * We have thus in the past definitely laid down the rule in Arizona that, where an action has for its primary purpose the obtaining of independent relief, and the vacating or setting aside of a judgment is merely incidental thereto, such action is not a direct, but a collateral, attack upon the judgment. * * * ”

From that statement and plaintiffs’ admission throughout their brief, although in their supplemental brief they use the term “direct”, it seems clear that this is a collateral attack on the judgment in Cause No. 6738. Consequently, the irregularities in the tax sale could not be raised and the assignments of error based thereon must be denied. Our inquiry, then, is limited to the court’s jurisdiction, or lack thereof, as a result of service of process upon the American Ore Corporation after its dissolution by serving the statutory agent of the' corporation, and by such other considerations as we will hereinafter develop.

*155 The general rule is that when a corporation has been dissolved no suit can be filed against it and no personal judgment can be obtained against it in the absence of a statute or of a public policy to the contrary. See Note in 97 A.L.R. 483.

The precise point has not heretofore been raised in this court, and it therefore becomes a matter of first impression. Under the circumstances we are bound to adhere to the rule as determined in other states unless it appears that it is based upon specious reasoning or is contra to the statutes of Arizona or the public policy of this state.

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Bluebook (online)
192 P.2d 720, 67 Ariz. 151, 1948 Ariz. LEXIS 105, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bates-v-mitchell-ariz-1948.