Conway v. Ellison

14 Ark. 360
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedJanuary 15, 1852
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 14 Ark. 360 (Conway v. Ellison) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Conway v. Ellison, 14 Ark. 360 (Ark. 1852).

Opinion

Hon. S. H. Hempstead, Special Judge,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This bill was filed by Conway, to enjoin proceedings on a judgment at law, obtained by Ellison against him in the State of Tennessee, on the 24th January, 1846, upon personal service of process. After stating that he had been appointed guardian of George M. Gray, who was a brother-law of the defendant, had sent him to Nashville, to perfect and complete his education, and paid all the expenses and charges attending the same, which were allowed him in the settlement of his accounts, had ceased to be guardian on the 13th of January, 1842, on the ward’s reaching the age of twenty-one, and had turned over to the ward his property, the complainant alleged, in substance, that he never had any transactions with, nor did he ever owe Ellison anything individually; that in 1840 the defendant wrote one or two letters to the complainant, claiming compensation for the board of George M. Gray, to the amount of about forty dollars, to which the complainant replied by letter, that he expected to receive a large sum of money for the use of his ward, and if the account was sent duly probated, he would pay it out of his own funds: that in 1843 Ellison visited Hempstead county, where complainant resided, and saw him on many occasions, but that no claim was prefered or mentioned by Ellison, and complainant supposed that it had been adjusted by Gray, and gave himself no concern about it; that in October, 1845, the complainant visited Nashville, Tennessee, and was there served with a writ requiring him to answer said Ellison to a plea of debt, and in which writ the complainant was described to be “Guardian of George M. Gray;” that he consulted an eminent lawyer in Nashville, and truly represented to him all the material facts of the case, who assured the complainant that the action could not be maintained nor a recovery had, without proof that he was still guardian of Gray, and the attorney pledged himself to attend to and defend the action; and see that the necessary proof was adduced to defeat it, in the event there should be no failure of evidence on the part of the plaintiff; that knowing that the claim was unfounded and never could be proven, and relying on his attorney to defeat the suit at the trial, he gave no further attention to it, and heard nothing more from it until 1849, when an action was brought on the judgment, which appeared to have been rendered for $174 debt, and $53 damages and costs; that his attorney, “either by fraud and collusion with said Ellison, or from some unaccountable conduct,” failed to appear and defend the suit as he had promised to do, and judgment was rendered against the complainant by default, without the intervention of a jury, or the production of any evidence whatever to establish the demand.

The defendant answered, denying the material allegations’™ the bill, and claimed the benefit of the judgment, and also set up in the answer that the defence, if available, should have been made at law, and that a court of equity had no jurisdiction to grant the relief prayed for in the bill.

1. The judgment of a court of another State can only be impeached for want of jurisdiction over the subject matter or person, or on the ground of fraud, and hence it is not competent for the court, where the remedy is sought, to inquire into mere irregularities, such as whether judgment was pronounced with or without a jury; or evidence was or was not adduced, or matters of a like nature; because it must be manifest, that to tolerate such objections, would be in effect to exercise a revisory power over the judgment in a collateral proceeding, and thus destroy its validity; The judgment itself closes the door to such defects, and hence if the imputed irregularities and errors in the bill had been proved, still they could have no effect whatever in the decision of this cause, 2 Peters 162. 10 Peters 468, 475. 2 McLean 59.

There is but one allegation which approaches towards laying a foundation for relief, and that is a general one, insinuating fraud and collusion between the attorney and Ellison, to obtain the judgment. It is not a direct charge of fraud, since it was made alternatively, and coupled with an allegation of “unaccountable conduct” in the attorney, the meaning of which is not defined, nor are we informed of what precise acts it consisted, or by what standard to be measured.

As fraud is never to be presumed, it follows that, where it is relied as a ground of relief, the facts and circumstances constituting the fraud, must be stated in the bill with distinctness and precision, so that an issue will be formed which may apprize both parties of proof proper to be taken. Kennedy vs. Kennedy, 2 Ala. 571. Penderton vs. Galloway, 9 Ham. 178. Pleadings in equity and at law are designed to apprize parties and the court of the material facts on which the asserted right depends, and to invoke attention to the points to which testimony should be directed, Crockett vs. Lee, 7 Wheat. 527. Necessity imposes it as a duty, and justice requires that the decree in all cases should conform to the allegations and proofs, and indeed, the relaxation of these rules to any great extent would be productive of confusion, uncertainty and injustice. This doctrine was in effect recognized in Blakeney vs. Ferguson, 3 Eng. 276, and is not only entirely conformable to reason, but amply supported by the best authorities. James vs. McKennon, 6 John. 559, 564. Cresset vs. Milton, 1 Ves.jr. 449. 3 Wend. 653.

Whatever is essential to the rights of the complainant and within his knowledge ought to be alleged with such degree of certainty, as to give the defendant full information of the case he is called on to answer; or on his failure to appear and defend, that the court may decree on the face of the bill in favor of the Complainant, 1 Daniell’s Ch. Pr. 411, 421. Story Eq. Pl. 28. The same precision of statement is neither required or attainable in equity as in pleadings at law, but the meaning of the rule is, that the substantial grounds of relief must be stated with such general certainty and precision, as to apprize the defendant of the tz’ue zzature of the case, and the points to which testiznony should be applied; and justice demands that in all cases, the rule should be observed. It is plain that the allegation in the bill lacks the requisite certainty in the matter of the fraud, but even if it was sufficient, no proof whatever was taken or ofiered, either express or circumstantial, to sustain it; nor was it even proved that counsel had been l’etained at all. There can be no imputation more sezious or grievous against an attorney than that by fraud or collusion with his adversaiy, he suffered azi unjust judgment to be obtained against his client, and it should not only be distinctly charged and cleai'ly pi-oved, but one so regardless of the duties and forgetful of the obligations of a high and honorable profession should be promptly stricken from its rolls.

If the complainant was zzot indebted to the defendazzt, it was a strictly legal defezzce, and should have been made in the suit at law in Tennessee. Dewees vs. Richardson, 1 A. K. Marsh. 313. He was bound to make it at law, and could have no relief in equity unless he shows that he was prevented from doing so, by accident, surprise or mistake, or by the fraud of the opposite party, without his own fault or negligence. Andrews vs. Fenter, 1 Ark. 186. Hempstead vs. Watkins, 1 Eng. 356. Lansing vs. Eddy, 1 Johns. Ch. R. 51. Duncan vs. Lyon, 3 Johns. Ch. R. 351. Foster vs. Wood, 6 Johns. Ch. R. 89.

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14 Ark. 360, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/conway-v-ellison-ark-1852.