Cadwallader v. Evans

1 Disney (Ohio) 585
CourtOhio Superior Court, Cincinnati
DecidedDecember 15, 1857
StatusPublished

This text of 1 Disney (Ohio) 585 (Cadwallader v. Evans) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Superior Court, Cincinnati primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cadwallader v. Evans, 1 Disney (Ohio) 585 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1857).

Opinion

Storer, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

The plaintiffs in error claim that there was no valid order for the sale, under which defendants derive title, because, say they, the petition filed by the administrators assumes to be a bill in equity, addressed to the court of common pleas, on their chancery side, and as the probate jurisdiction conferred on that tribunal was special only, they could not exercise it in the mode sought by the administrators. At the time those proceedings were commenced, the law of 1831, defining the duties of executors and administrators, was in force. By section 31, it was provided, “That when the executor or administrator shall apply to the court under this act, for authority to sell the real estate of his testator or intestate, the application shall be by petition, to which the widow, and the lawful heir or heirs, or the person or persons having the next estate of inheritance of the testator or intestate, if known to such administrator or executor, shall be made defendant thereto; and the defendants shall be served with process or otherwise notified of the pendency of such petition in the manner prescribed in the ‘Act directing the mode of proceeding in chancery, etc.’ ”

It will be perceived, no particular form of proceeding is prescribed, the substance only to be embodied is set forth; hence, it is immaterial what the petition, considered as a part of the pleadings in the case, may be denominated; whether it is artificially or inartificially framed, or the court to whom it is addressed, are described as sitting in chancery, or holding pleas at law. If the tribunal itself, to which the application is made, has the power to grant the prayer of the petitioners, it can not derogate from the [589]*589validity of any order or decree it may render, if any technical language by which the same court is supposed to possess other and further jurisdiction, is fouud, in the commencement or conclusion-of the petition. "We may well reject every such unnecessary or informal statement or surplusage, and find in the proceedings nevertheless all that is required to be averred by the statutes. “ Utile per inutile non vitiatur.” 2 Tidd’s Practice, 827.

There was no defect of jurisdiction in the common pleas, as a court of probate; it was expressly given by section 5 of article 8, of the old constitution; and it is not unimportant to notice that'the language of the section 3 which conferred common law and chancery jurisdiction, is not more definite or intelligible. The subject-matter, involved in this controversy, was clearly then within the jurisdiction of the common pleas, and whenever its process was served upon the defendants, named in the proceeding to subject the property to sale, jurisdiction over the person also attached.

This was the express provision of the practice act then in force regulating proceedings at law, volume 29, 117; Swan, 649, and so also in chancery, Ibid, 82; Swan, 698. See also 19 Ohio, 238, Daniels v. Stevens.

If, then, the jurisdiction existed over the property and the person, the question is directly presented, and it seems to us it covers all the objections urged by the plaintiffs in error, — can any subsequent act of the court, either in adjudicating upon matters submitted, or in rendering their decree, however erroneous or informal, affect the validity of their judgment?

This is no novel question; it has been often discussed in our own courts, and decided in every conceivable form.

In 3 Ohio, 561, Ludlow’s heirs v. Johnson, it was said by Judge Hitchcock: “If the court of common pleas, acting as a court of probate, or orphan’s court, had jurisdiction, an end is put to the question; the evidence ought to have been received. "We can not inquire collaterally whether that [590]*590jurisdiction was properly exercised. The order may have been unadvisedly or erroneously made, but the purchaser has innocently acquired rights of which he can not be divested, so long as it remains unreversed.”

This is affirmed in very many subsequent cases, and has become, by the universal assent of the profession, the law of the State. The rules applicable to ordinary judgments, at law or in equity, where the tribunal in which they are rendered has complete jurisdiction, govern also the order of a probate court. All the implications of the one case may be drawn in the other. The proceedings, in all cases, are supposed to be “ bene et rite acta,” until the final adjudication is set aside, or reversed; 7 Ohio, part 2, 138, Ewing v. Hollister.

Whether, then, the order was granted to the administrators of Bassett, without giving a day to the guardian, ad litem,, to traverse the petition, or whether it was granted before a guardian was appointed, and appeared for the minor defendants, it is equally well settled that the judgment of the court is valid until it is directly adjudicated, by reversal, before an appellate or superior tribunal. No collateral inquiry will be permitted as to the mode pursued by the court rendering the decree. All parties are forever concluded while the decree stands.

Thus it was held in 3 Ohio, 355, St. Clair’s heirs v. Smith, et al.; and in 7 Ohio, part 1, 198, Ewing’s lessee v. Higby; that it was only error to decree against infants, when the court had obtained jurisdiction. And so when a judgment, or decree, is rendered against a married woman, it is good until reversed; 9 Ohio, 117, Pillsbury, lessee, v. Dugan. In these cases the error is one of fact only, and may be reached by a writ of error, coram vobis; 6 Ohio, 518, Dows v. Harper.

We may well conclude, therefore, that the order in controversy, was voidable only, if even that imputation can rest upon it.

Before we can decide that the judgment is void, we must [591]*591be satisfied that it was “ coram non judiee.” In order to establish such a proposition, no jurisdiction over the person, or the subject-matter, must have been acquired by the court, but as both were clearly obtained, in the proceeding before us, the plaintiffs’ hypothesis is without foundation.

If we recur to the history of the proceedings by executors and administrators, to sell lands, we shall find that, in this county, the common pleas, when once the defendants were in court, acted in a summary manner, and without reference to their practice in other cases. Perhaps there is scarcely an exception where the order was not granted at the term when the petition was filed. The object to be accomplished was a speedy settlement of estates, and thus enable the administrator to accomplish that purpose within the period required by the statute. Hence, no delay was asked; and in the great majority of cases, none should be granted. There was always a sufficient guaranty for the faithful discharge of duty, in the bond required of the officer, and the constant supervision of the court, who, while they gave the power to sell, at last settled his accounts. Besides, the property could not be sacrificed, as it was first valued by commissioners appointed by the court. There could be no sale, unless at two-thirds the appraisement, and all the acts of the administrator, in executing the authority, were finally to be scrutinized and approved before the sale could be confirmed, or the purchaser obtain a title.

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Bluebook (online)
1 Disney (Ohio) 585, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cadwallader-v-evans-ohsuperctcinci-1857.