Burk v. Hill

55 Ind. 419
CourtIndiana Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 15, 1876
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 55 Ind. 419 (Burk v. Hill) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Burk v. Hill, 55 Ind. 419 (Ind. 1876).

Opinion

Biddle, J.

Complaint in two paragraphs, to recover the possession of land.. The first paragraph is in the statutory form; the second sets forth the title of the complainant. Answer in general denial. Trial by the court, finding fqr appellee, and, over a motion for a new trial and exceptions reserved, judgment on the finding. Appeal.

[420]*420The sufficiency of the second paragraph of complaint is questioned by an assignment of error, but the question is not discussed in the briefs of the parties—indeed, it seems to be waived. We therefore dispose of it at once by holding the paragraph good.

The appellee, as against Matilda Burk, claims title to the land under a judgment and decree of foreclosure, founded upon a promissory note and mortgage made by the said Matilda and others, rendered on default, and a sale of the land, and sheriff’s deed, to the appellee. In her defence, upon the trial, Matilda offered to prove by Myrick Smith, a competent witness, that she was, and for the last thirty years had been, the wife of Jeremiah Burk. To this evidence the appellee objected. Ilis objection was sustained by the court, to which ruling he excepted and reserved his exception. The purpose of the evidence, doubtless, was, to show that Matilda Burk was a married woman at the time she made the note which is the foundation of the decree under which the appellee claims title, and, therefore, that the note was void. This raises the question as to the validity of a judgment against a married woman, founded on a note made by her during coverture, and is, indeed, the main question discussed by the parties in the case.

It is conceded that the note of ^married woman is void. From this premise, the counsel for the appellants insist, that a judgment founded upoh such note is also void. They reason thus:

“ Then if her contract is void because she has no power to make a contract, how can her mere silence, when she is sued, make it valid, so as to enable the court to render a valid and binding judgment on it ? If she can not, by a positive act, make a binding obligation, how can her mere passiveness, under any circumstances, give validity to her contracts ? Can she bind herself and subject her property to sale by mere silence, when she can not do it by a positive declaration or a positive act ? ” * *’ *

[421]*421Again: “But a married woman, being incapable of making contracts, can not make a contract by admitting that she made it. It is absolutely void, because she has no power to make it, and neither she nor a court can breathe into it the breath of life. If a married woman can not make a valid contract, she can not, either by her action, or her confession, or her silence, invest a court with authority to make it binding by a judgment. The court can not render a judgment with only a blank piece of paper for its foundation. There must be some admission, to give validity to the contract before the rendition of the judgment on it; and surely such an admission by a married woman can not make the note valid, if her signature to it can not. If a note is void when a judgment is rendered on it, the judgment will be void also. The court can not metamorphose a void note into a valid judgment. It can not make something out of nothing.” This logic is ingenious, and may be sound, as between the parties, while'the note remains merely a note; but it will not hold, against persons who have been defrauded by such a note, nor against the public faith, due to judgments solemnly rendered by courts of record, having jurisdiction over the person and the subject-matter. And it is true that the silence, admission or affirmance, in any way, by a married woman, of her void note, can not make it a valid note; but her silence, admission, or affirmance, when she is sued, and has the power to speak, admit, or affirm—as she has in this State—will transmute her void note into a valid judgment—and for two very essential reasons: first, that in such cases she is estopped by the judgment thus admitted, and can never afterwards gainsay it; and, second, because the public faith, for the security of person and property, requires that all judgments, sufficient on their face, shall import absolute, unquestioned and unquestionable verity. If the appellant should prevail in this case, on the argument of her counsel, she would perpetrate a palpable fraud; and once [422]*422adopt what is contended for as a rule, and, instead of establishing rules of general justice, securing human rights, and upholding public faith, we should adopt a system of fraud, loosen all notion of right, and undermine public confidence in judicial proceedings. It is quite true, as the counsel say, that “ The court can not render a judgment with only a blank piece of paper for its foundation; ” but a void,note is a very different thing from a blank piece of paper, and is a potent instrument in the perpetration of fraud. The one, on its face, is nothing but paper; the other, on its face, is a valid note. No eye can discover the defect. Its invalidity rests in the silence of the law, and can be known only to those who know the facts; and when the law calls upon the party who makes the note—fair upon its face—to state the facts, and they have the opportunity and the power to speak, they must speak, or forever hold their peace. The appellant in this case had this notice, had the opportunity and power to speak; she remained silent, allowed the judgment to go against her, with all the facts in her knowledge to prevent it, had received the consideration for the note, and, after the judgment, stood by, took no steps to prevent the sale, allowed the appellee to purchase the land, and thus invest his money therein, and now, years afterwards, when possession of the land is sought against her, says that the note she made was void! A system of judicature that would uphold such a transaction would render courts of justice machines of fraud.

The counsel for the appellants cite two cases in support of their views. The first is Morse v. Toppan, 3 Gray, 441. The whole of the opinion is expressed in the following words:

Shaw, 0. J.—The facts being agreed, they are to be taken as of the same legal effect, as if pleaded. The fact that the defendant was a married woman, when the judgment was rendered against her, would alone be a good bar to this action. It would he the same as if she had entered [423]*423into an obligation by bond at the same time; to which she might have pleaded non est factum. A judgment is in the nature of a contract; it is a specialty, and creates a debt; and to have that effect, it must be taken against one capable of contracting a debt.”

What induced a respectable court to pronounce such an opinion as this, or upon what ground it rests, is more than we know or can perceive. To us, to place a judgment upon no higher ground than an executory bond, to which non est factum might be pleaded, and to say that a judgment, to be obligatory, must be taken against one capable of contracting a debt seeing to be legal absurdities. And the case cited in this opinion to sustain it gives it no support whatever. Faithorne v. Blaquire, 6 M. & S. 73. It was a case where the court, on motion, set aside a judgment on a warrant of attorney, given by a former court, although she had been divorced a mensa et thoro. This is quite different from attacking a judgment collaterally to defeat an action of ejectment.

The other case cited by the appellant is Griffith v. Clarke, 18 Md.

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

Related

Maynard v. Waidlich
60 N.E. 348 (Indiana Supreme Court, 1901)
In re Pittsburgh, Cincinnati, Chicago & St. Louis Railway Co.
47 N.E. 151 (Indiana Supreme Court, 1897)
Haggart v. Stehlin
22 L.R.A. 577 (Indiana Supreme Court, 1893)
Louisville, New Albany & Chicago Railway Co. v. Berkey
35 N.E. 3 (Indiana Supreme Court, 1893)
Louisville & Jeffersonville Ferry v. Nolan
34 N.E. 710 (Indiana Supreme Court, 1893)
Smith v. Borden
11 L.R.A. 585 (Supreme Court of Rhode Island, 1891)
Bennett v. Mattingly
10 N.E. 299 (Indiana Supreme Court, 1887)
McCurdy v. Baughman
43 Ohio St. (N.S.) 78 (Ohio Supreme Court, 1885)
Wright v. Wright
97 Ind. 444 (Indiana Supreme Court, 1884)
State ex rel. Braden v. Krug
94 Ind. 366 (Indiana Supreme Court, 1884)
Burk v. Platt
88 Ind. 283 (Indiana Supreme Court, 1882)
The Tubal Cain
9 F. 834 (S.D. New York, 1881)
Millikan v. State ex rel. Bishop
70 Ind. 283 (Indiana Supreme Court, 1880)
Emmett v. Yandes
60 Ind. 548 (Indiana Supreme Court, 1878)
Schlemmer v. Rossler
59 Ind. 326 (Indiana Supreme Court, 1877)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
55 Ind. 419, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/burk-v-hill-ind-1876.