Dunklin v. Wilson

64 Ala. 162
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedDecember 15, 1879
StatusPublished
Cited by65 cases

This text of 64 Ala. 162 (Dunklin v. Wilson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dunklin v. Wilson, 64 Ala. 162 (Ala. 1879).

Opinion

STONE, J.

A party sought to be concluded by a judgment or decree, must be shown to have had notice or knowledge of the suit, actual, or, in some cases, constructive ; and if this notice or knowledge be wanting, the record of recovery has no binding effect. This rests on the plain principle of right, that no man shall be deprived of his goods, until an opportunity has been afforded him of making defense.

Under our system, the return of a sheriff, or other ministerial officer, asserting that service was made, is evidence of the fact; becomes a part of the record, and, to that extent, will uphold the most solemn or momentous judicial proceedings. The sheriff, or, in case of his incompetency to act, the coroner acting as sheriff, is a sworn officer ; and the truth of his returns is guaranteed by the sanctions of his official oath. Hence, it is held that, in the performance of duties the law casts on him, he is acting under oath. A return indorsed on process by such officer, in the line of his official duties, is a sworn affirmation that it is true; and, until set aside under the authority of the court, or disproved in a proper case, it imports verity, as absolutely as any other matter which goes to make up the records of the court. — 2 Brick. Dig. 456, §§ 340, 341. In Brown v. Turner, 11 Ala. 752, it was said : “ The court must, of necessity, give credence to the acts of its own officers; otherwise, it would be impeded, at every step, by the trial of collateral issues.” In Martin v. Barney, it was said : “ It is clear that the return of the sheriff on the wrrit is, in its nature, both the highest and best evidence of execution.”

This evidence, however, is not conclusive, except that it can not be impeached, when it comes up collaterally and incidentally. On a direct proceeding for the purpose, its truth may sometimes be controverted. Thus, if the service [168]*168of process, giving jurisdiction of the person, appear on its face to be regular, and judgment or decree be rendered in the cause, the defendant, under our decisions, may obtain relief in equity, by averring and proving that, in fact, he was not notified of the proceedings, and that he had a good and meritorious defense to the action. Want of notice or knowledge is not enough. He must go further, and show, both in averment and proof, that he had and has a defense good in law, and in what that defense consists. The court must be put in possession of the facts; for the sufficiency of the defense is an indispensable element of the issue.— Givens v. Tidmore, 8 Ala. 745; Crofts v. Dexter, Ib. 767; Freeman Judgments, §§ 495, 498.

The tendencies of the testimony, in the present record, make a case of extreme hardship, if not oppression, on the complainants in the court below. We do not hesitate to declare our conviction, that Mrs. Wilson, acting for her absent husband, agreed with Colley, the complainant in the first and second suits, on terms of compromise and settlement, by which she agreed to pay, and Colley agreed to receive, twenty-five hundred dollars in Confederate treasury-notes, in full payment of the claim the latter held against Wilson, unpaid purchase-money of the land; that, in pursuance of this agreement, Mrs. Wilson paid Colley two thous- and dollars, and that Gafford. paid the residue, at the request of Mrs. Wilson. The weight of the testimony shows that Gafford was repaid this money so paid by him, in the cotton which Mrs. Wilson delivered to him. We think Gafford fails to show that Wilson’s notes were traded or transferred to him. On the contrary, we think the notes were fully paid to Colley, and that the only claim he had was to have the costs of the then pending suit paid by Wilson. Saving this claim for .costs, which was at that time necessarily a small sum, it was the right and privilege of Wilson, and of those standing in his right, to have the notes delivered up and cani celled. Gafford, bv paying the balance of the debt to Colley, at the request of Mrs. Wilson, acquired no right to Colley’s lien on the land as a vendor.— Chapman v. Abrahams, 61 Ala. 108. It is thus shown there was a good and valid defense to Colley’s bill to enforce a vendor’s lien against the lands. But the proof which establishes the existence of a defense to that suit, also shows that Mrs. Wilson had full knowledge of its existence; for she made the compromise, made the .larger payment herself, and procured the residue to be made through Gafford. Why, when pressed with the effort to revive the original suit in 1867, she did not assert this defense; why she did not inform her counsel of its existence, [169]*169is not attempted to be explained. Why, armed with the defense she certainly could have made good, she consented to bargain away her right to make it, for one-ninth part 'of the land in controversy, is equally unexplained in this record.

But the other material point of inquiry is, have the complainants satisfactorily proved that the coroner did not in fact serve the process on them. The proof of this averment, though negative in its character, rested on them. The only testimony offered in favor of this averment, is that of Mrs. Wilson and her two sons; all complainants in the present suit. They all swear that process was served on them in 1867, but not in 1868. The sons, being infants, testify that they did not, and do not, know the object or purport of the process that was served on them. Neither witness states any fact or circumstance, in aid of his testimony, that was calculated to impress its date on their memories. Six or seven years had intervened between the date of the coroner’s return, and the giving of their testimony. In the absence of some attending circumstance to fix the attention, associated in the memory with the transaction itself, there is no subject on which human recollection is more frequently at fault, than the particular date of past occurrences. Against this uncorroborated proof is, first, the sworn return of the officer, made in twenty-four hours after the alleged service; second, that the suit was prosecuted to a final decree, and the lands sold under that decree; third, the unassailed proof of two or more witnesses, that Mrs. Wilson did have knowledge of the suit while it was pending; fourth, the undisputed fact that first Gafford, and then Dunklin, took possession of the land, and occupied it in their own right, and with the knowledge of complainants, for seven or more years, before the present bill was filed; fifth, that Mrs. Wilson not only made no defense to the suit, but actually bargained away her right to make defense, and, after the end of the suit, and sale of the land under the decree, she accepted a conveyance from Dunklin, who thereby consummated and performed the agreement by which Gafford had purchased off her right of defense. We do not think the proof in this case is sufficient to overturn the presumption in favor of the correctness of the coroner’s return. To allow it to do so, would be to accord too little solemnity to judgments' and decrees of the courts of the country. It is the interest of the commonwealth that there be an end of litigation ; and when judgment has been pronounced which is not reversed on error, a re-trial should not be had for light or trivial causes, no matter how unjust the result may be shown to [170]*170have been, unless it can be shown that the court pronouncing the judgment was without jurisdiction, either of the subject-matter, or the person. — Hunt v. Ellison, 32 Ala. 173; Pettus v. McClannahan, 52 Ala. 55.

But there is another principle that is fatal to the present case, even if the children and heirs of Mr.

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64 Ala. 162, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dunklin-v-wilson-ala-1879.