Brown v. Parker

28 Wis. 21
CourtWisconsin Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 15, 1871
StatusPublished
Cited by36 cases

This text of 28 Wis. 21 (Brown v. Parker) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wisconsin Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Brown v. Parker, 28 Wis. 21 (Wis. 1871).

Opinion

Dixon, O. J.

In determining the effect of the judgment sued upon, how far it may be re-examined, and what relief, if any, may be granted against it, we are to act and decide precisely as the court of Hlinois would do were the same questions there presented. Judge STORY, in his examination of the [25]*25subject as to the effect of the records and judicial proceedings of one state in the courts of another, under the clause of the constitution of the United States, the act of Congress, and the decisions of the supreme court, concludes by stating the rule as follows: “It gives them the same'faith and credit as they have in the state court from which they are taken. If in such court they have the faith and credit of the highest nature, that is to say of record evidence, they must have the same faith and credit in every other court. So that congress have declared the effect of the records, by declaring what degree of faith and credit sba.11 be given to them. If a judgment is conclusive in the state where it is pronounced, it is equally conclusive every where. If re-examinable there, it is open to the same inquiries in every other slate. It is, therefore, put upon the same footing as a domestic judgment.” 2 Story on the Constitution, §1813.

This naturally leads to the inquiry, how far the judgment in question is open to re-examination, and what relief could have been granted against it, by the courts of Illinois, had application been made there upon the same facts set forth in the answer here, and which were proved upon the trial. The judgment was by confession upon warrant of attorney. There was no other appearance or confession, or opportunity of appearance, than by the attorney in pursuance of the warrant. It is a general principle, prevailing in nearly all of the states as well as in England, that the courts of law exercise an equitable jurisdiction over judgments thus entered, and will, for cause shown, open, vacate or modify them, and stay proceedings, or direct an issue and trial upon the merits. Such is the rule in this state, and, upon examination, we find it to have been fully recognized and adopted by the courts of Illinois. Lake v. Cook, 15 Ill., 353. We find this jurisdiction constantly spoken of as an equitable one, the reason of which we suppose to be that it originated in and was first exercised by the courts of equity, and was thence assumed by the courts of law. It was a jurisdiction properly arising on the ground of fraud, or sometimes, it may [26]*26be, of inevitable accident or mistake. Story’s Eq. Jur., §§ 1578, 1574. But its assumption and exercise by tbe courts of law did not deprive equity of its power. Tbe jurisdiction was thenceforth concurrent, as in many other like cases. And we accordingly find in Brinkerhoff v. Marvin, 5 Johns. Ch., 320, the general jurisdiction of the chancellor unquestioned, although the authority of the courts of law was then fully recognized and established. And so we think the courts of equity in this state still retain their jurisdiction in this class of cases, notwithstanding the same relief may be obtained by motion in the courts of law; and that, under proper circumstances, the jurisdiction will still be exercised.

If the judgment in question had been entered in one of the courts of this state, and application been made in equity for relief, either by an action commenced, or, as here, which is an entirely equivalent proceeding, by answer in a suit upon the judgment, we have no doubt of the power of equity to have given the judgment defendant any aid or protection which the facts of his case authorized or required.

It could have granted him any relief obtainable by motion in the court of law, save only to vacate or modify the judgment itself. This the court of equity could not do, but it could have done that which was equally efficient. It could have reexamined the case upon its merits, and have perpetually enjoined the plaintiff from the collection of the whole or such part of his claim as was found not to be justly and legally due. This power of the courts of equity in this state may be fairly presumed to be possessed by the same courts in the state of Illinois. We may fairly presume that relief under the same circumstances and to the same extent would be granted by the courts of equity there as here. But should this be otherwise, and the remedy by motion in the court of law be regarded as exclusive in that state, it still does not affect the question now before us. The inquiry is not as to the manner of administering relief, nor by what court, but as to the nature or kind of relief. [27]*27The courts of tire different states redress wiongs and afford relief in their own peculiar modes. The modes may differ, hut the relief to he granted as against the judgment of a court of another state must he the same as would be granted in that state. Some of the states, as for example Pennsylvania, have no separate equity system, hut all -remedies are to he obtained in the courts of law. The legal remedy in one state may, therefore, be an equitable one in another, and vice versa. We here grant relief according to our own established rules and modes of proceeding, regardless of the form by'which the same relief might be granted by the courts of Illinois.

It being determined, therefore, that the judgment in question is re-examinable by the courts of Illinois, and subject to being set aside or vacated and the cause of action investigated upon its merits, and that the courts of equity of this state possess the same power with respect to domestic judgments of the like kind, our next inquiry must be as to the nature of the defense pleaded and proved, and whether it is such as if pleaded and proved in the court of Illinois, application having first been made there for that purpose, ought to have prevailed in that court, and been adjudged a valid and sufficient defense to the cause of action set forth in the declaration. If it be such a defense there, it seems clear that it should prevail here. Had the defendant applied there upon affidavit setting forth the same facts, and in addition (a matter not necessary to be pleaded here) that by the laws of Wisconsin the debt or claim in question was extinguished, we think leave to open the judgment-and to plead must have been granted; and, the facts being established upon pleadings and proof, we are also of the opinion that the defense must have been adjudged valid and effectual.

It was long since settled with respect to the--statute of limitations of this state, that as to parties residing herein it does not affect the remedy merely, but directly destroys the right itself, after the time prescribed by it has once elapsed. This was so held in Sprecker v. Wakeley, 11 Wis., 432, and Knox v. [28]*28Cleaveland, 13 Wis., 245. It is trae, those were not actions upon contracts for the payment of money or the performance of any other thing; but the principle must be the same in all classes of actions. It seems impossible to make a distinction upon any sound reasoning to be applied to the subject. A statute which is held to extinguish the right in one class of cases, as where property is adversely claimed and possessed, must, its language being the same, also be held to extinguish the right where the subject upon which it operates is a claim or demand founded upon contract. And so we find it to have been decided by those courts which hold as we have done with respect to the operation and effect of the statute.

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Bluebook (online)
28 Wis. 21, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brown-v-parker-wis-1871.