Cummins v. Kinsinger

10 Ohio Law. Abs. 520
CourtButler County Court of Common Pleas
DecidedMay 15, 1931
DocketNo. 39160
StatusPublished

This text of 10 Ohio Law. Abs. 520 (Cummins v. Kinsinger) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Butler County Court of Common Pleas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cummins v. Kinsinger, 10 Ohio Law. Abs. 520 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1931).

Opinion

BOYD, J.

This is an action for the possession of the real estate and for an accounting for the rents, issues and profits of the premises described in the petition and is submitted to the court upon an agreed' statement of facts.

Samuel Kinsinger claims the ownership of the farm, described in the petition, by deed from James C. Cummins and Estella C. Cummins, dated February 2,1914 and marked “Defendant’s Exhibit No. 1.”

The plaintiffs claim that the title to said real estate is vested in them with the exception of Estella C. Cummins, claiming they are all the heirs of the body of James C. Cummins, grandson of James Cummins, deceased.

That the father of these plaintiffs brought a suit to contest the validity of a will and that a judgment had been rendered thereon setting aside the will but that certain of the children who were alive at that time, and who are numbered among the plaintiffs in this case, were not made parties to the will contest. ,

Counsel in the case agree that no service having been made upon the heirs of James C. Cummins and George Cummins, the suit to set aside the will as to these infants was absolutely void and the only question the court has to decide is whether or not a judgment of the Common Pleas Court in case No. 23,135, James C. Cummins, et al, plaintiffs, v George C. Cummins, et al, defendants, setting aside the last will and testament of the testator without the intervention of a jury is void or voidable, the defendants claiming that the court had jurisdiction to hear the case and its conclusion, although based upon a mistake of law has never been appealed from and is to be given full force and credit.

The action in which this judgment was rendered is claimed by the defendants that the defendants filed a suit asking in the petition for the title to be quieted in the petitioner.

The plaintiffs claim that the judgment in the suit to quiet title was absolutely null and void and of no effect and in no way affected the title of the plaintiffs to the farm described in the petition in the case at bar.

They further claim that Samuel Kinsinger could not have been a purchaser- in good faith because the records in the suit to quiet title show on their face that the court had no jurisdiction and that there was a defect in the title due to the failure to make the plaintiffs parties in the suit to contest the will of James C. Cummins, deceased.

The defendant relies upon the case qf Bearss v Corbett (Ind. 1927) 158 N.E., 299, -which was -an action to quiet title, where the court held that a judgment in that par-' ticular case was rendered by & court of competent jurisdiction; that it was binding until-the judgment is appealed from or reversed and could not be collaterally attacked no matter how erroneous such a judgment or decree may be. The court thinks that that is good law.

In the case of Ruppin v McLachlon, 122, Iowa, 343; 98 N.W., 153, where the same holding is shown by the report. The Indiana case was an action to construe a deed and the Iowa case was an action to construe a will.

The rule as laid down by our Supreme Court in State ex rel Hawke, v Le Blond, 108 Oh St page 126, in the fourth* syllabus is as follows:

“Where the court has jurisdiction of the parties and the subject matter, and ¡j¡ts judgment is not null and void by reason of being beyond the power and authority of the court to enter, such judgment is not open to collateral attack in an independent proceeding.”

See R. C. L. Vol. 15, Page 853, 854, §327, §328.

It also seems to be well settled that ip addition to jurisdiction of the parties and the subject matter it is necessary to the validity of a judgment that the court should have jurisdiction of the question which its judgment assumes to decide and jurisdiction to render a judgment for the particular remedy or relief which the judgment undertakes to grant.' A judgment not authorized by law is void. .

C. J. Vol. 33, page 1076, §37.

In the case of Russell, Adm. v The Fourth National Bank, 102, Oh St 248, the third syllabus is as follows:

“Although a court may have jurisdiction of the parties and the subject matter in an action it cannot transcend the power legally conferred on it.”

The Supreme Court in that case held that the Court of Appeals has no power to render a final judgment except where the ultimate controlling facts are conceded or where a finding of them has been made by the trial court, and that the judgment of the Court of Appeals was absolutély void because it [522]*522had exceeded its power. Our Supreme Court in the case of State, ex rel Mentzer, 119 Oh St 558, has held that a decision of a jury rendered, in an election contest where there was a defect in the notices required by law is void and subject to collateral attack.

The plaintiffs claim that the proceedings of a court are wholly void where the court in the absence of a lawful jury attempts to try the cause when without a jury it had no jurisdiction to proceed to trial and to enter judgment. Cite R. C. L. Vol. 15, page 846, §319.

Sec 12082 GC provides:

“An issue must be made up either by pleadings or an order on the journal whether or not the writing produced is the last will or codicil of the testator which shall be tried by a jury. The verdict shall be conclusive unless a new trial be granted or the judgment is reversed or vacated.”

It is -contended that a will contest must 'be tried to a jury and that a court has no jurisdiction to try a will case itself. Cooch v Cooch, 18 Ohio, 146. Walker v Walker, 14 Oh St 157. Wagner v Ziegler, 44 Oh St 59.

The stattite in force at present is practically the same as it was in 1876 when the case of Mosier v Harmon, 29 Oh St at page 220, was decided by the Supreme Court of Ohio. The second syllabus is as follows:

“The mode of contesting the validity of a will thus admitted to probate, as provided by §24 of the Probate Act, and §9 of the Wills Act, is conclusive.”

The court at page 225 of this case says as follows:

' “Prior to the adoption of this section and the Code of civil procedure, the only mode of contest was by a bill in chancery, in which an issue was directed to be tried by a jury.”

Next to the last paragraph in this case is the following:

“While an instrument in the form of a last will and testament, that has been probated and recorded as a will, whether it is truly such A not, is permitted to remain unimpeached, the nineteenth section above quoted gives it the effect of a valid will, which, if not Contested within the time limited, will become binding as such forever.”
“We are therefore of the ppinion that the only mode of contesting the validity of a will that has been admitted to probate, is that provided by the two sections last above quoted. If those interested neglect to pursue the nfbde of contest there pointed out, the considerations above noticed drawn from the sections quoted, require that their rights should be forever barred.”

In the case of Hollrah v Lasance, 63, Oh St at page 64, Judge Shauck, Chief Justice, says:

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Related

Ruppin v. McLachlan
98 N.W. 153 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1904)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
10 Ohio Law. Abs. 520, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cummins-v-kinsinger-ohctcomplbutler-1931.