Erwin v. Lowry

48 U.S. 172, 12 L. Ed. 655, 7 How. 172, 1849 U.S. LEXIS 341
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedFebruary 18, 1849
StatusPublished
Cited by67 cases

This text of 48 U.S. 172 (Erwin v. Lowry) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Erwin v. Lowry, 48 U.S. 172, 12 L. Ed. 655, 7 How. 172, 1849 U.S. LEXIS 341 (1849).

Opinion

Mr. Justice fCATRON

delivered the opinion of the court;

Alfred J. Lowry sued James. Erwin in the District Court for the ninth district of Louisiana, for a tract of land of about six hundred acres, and forty-four slaves, who were employed in cultivating the land by growing cotton thereon. The property was situate in' the parish of Madison, in that State. The suit was commenced in 1841, by petition, which alleges that about July, 1840, one James Erwin, illegally, and by fraud and collusion, and without any legal title thereto, took possession.of; *179 all the above described property, and is still in possession of the same, has appropriated and wrongfully converted to his own use all the fruits and revenues of said property, and pretends to be the owner thereof, and refuses to deliver to the petitioner the possession. The property was not claimed by Lowry in his own right, but as curator of the estate of Alexander McNeill.

To this petition 'Erwin answered, among other things not within the cognizance of this court, that on the 6th day of July, 1840, he became the pr\ diaser of the property at public auction, at a sale made thereof by the marshal of the llnited States, who sold the same under a judgment, and on a writ of seizure and sale, issued from the Circuit Court of the United States for the Eastern District of Louisiana, in a case wherein Andrew Erwin .was plaintiff, and Hector McNeill, testamentary executor of Alexander McNeill, deceased, was defendant ; and that he paid the sum of sixteen thousand dollars in cash therefor, which was applied to the payment of a debt due by mortgage by the succession of Alexander' McNeill; and he exhibited a copy of' the proceedings on which the sale was founded; and his bill of sale made by the marshal for the land and negroes. These proceedings and the marshal’s deed were given in evidence by the defendant on the trial before the State District Court. A judgment was there given against Erwin, and the property decreed to Lowry as curator; from which Erwin appealed to the Supreme Court of Louisiana, where the • judgment of the District Court was affirmed; and to this judgment Erwin prosecuted a writ of error out .of this court,’'under the twenty-fifth section of the Judiciary Act of 1789, on the .ground that there was drawn in question the validity of án authority exercised under the United States, and that the decision of the Supreme Court of Louisiana was-against its validity. That such was the fact,, and that this court has jurisdiction, is not and cannot be controverted. The judgment ordering the seizure and sale was déclared "void, for several reasons. Such of them as . are subject to our cognizance we will proceed to consider.

The whole proceeding, commencing with the petition of Andrew Erwin demanding a seizure and sale, to James Erwin’s deed from the marshal,, was the exercise of one authority; and the question submitted for our consideration is, whether the marshal’s sale was void on any legal ground; — that is to say, whether the deed by the marshal to James Erwin was void for the reason that it was not supported, by a lawful judgment, or that, for want of a compliance with any legal requirements in conducting the seizure and sale, the deed was void. If void on any one ground, it would be altogether Useless to reverse *180 the judgment because an error had been committed on some other ground; as, on the cause being remanded, the State court would pronounce the deed void a second time on the true ground. This court was compelled so to hold in Collier v. Stanbrough, 6 How. 14.

The deed, in the. casé before us, was held void by the Supreme Court of Louisiana: — First, because Hector McNeill was not a citizen of that State when Andrew Erwin’s petition was filed. This- fact the court ascertained by proof dehors the record. The petition alleges that Andrew Erwin was a citizen of the State of Tennessee, therein residing; and that Hector McNeill was a citizen of the State of Louisiana, residing in the parish of Madison, and within the jurisdiction of the court. On being served witn process, Hector McNeill did not dispute the fact, nor make any defence ; the purchaser found the fact established by the record, nor could it be called in question in a collateral action and disproved, and the purchaser’s title defeated by inferior evidence. On this question the case of McCormick v. Sullivan, 10 Wheaton, 192, is entitled to great weight. There neither party was averred to be a citizen of any State ; and the attempt was made by a second suit to treat the purchaser’s title- as'a nullity, because-of this defect in the proceeding on which the purchase was founded; -but it was held that the purchaser took a good title. In the case nefore us, the record on its face was perfect, and evidence was let in to contradict and to- overthrow it, which we deem to be wholly inadmissible in any collateral proceeding. Hector McNeill was estopped to deny the fact; and so is the present party, his'successor.

The next question decided below was, that the property when it was seized and sold was part .of a succession, and, being in the course of administration in the Probate Court, could not be seized and sold by an execution founded bn a proceeding in another court. This question we declined to decide in the case of Collier v. Stanbrough, and ruled that cause on another ground. That a special mortgage, where no succession has occurred, may be foreclosed by this mode of proceeding, — that is, by an order of seizure and sale in the Circuit Court of the United States held in Louisiana,— we have no doubt. But the question here is, whether jurisdiction' could be exercised over mortgaged property whilst it was in a course of administration. That no jurisdiction existed in the United States Circuit Court was held in the case before us ; and so it had been held by the Supreme Court of Louisiana in previous cases. But in 1847 that court reviewed its previous decisions, in the case of Dupuy v. Bemiss. In the opinion there given, *181 the jurisdiction of the Federal court held in Louisiana is so accurately and cogently set forth, and the relative powers -and duties of the State and Federal judiciaries are so justly appreciated, as to relieve us from all further anxiety and embarrassment on the delicate question of conflict arising in the case, of Collier v. Stanbrough, and again in this cause. It was held in the case of Dupuy v. Bemiss, that, where a lien existed on property by a special mortgage before the debtor’s death, and the property passed by death and succession, with the lien attached, into the hands of a curator, and was in the course of administration in the Probate Court, the Circuit Court of the ■United States had jurisdiction, notwithstanding, to proceed agaiiist the property, and to enforce the creditor’s lien, and to decree a sale of th.e property, and that such sale was valid. We accord to this adjudication our decided approbation-; but take occasion to say, that, had we unfortunately been compelled to decide the question without this aid, our judgment would have been, that the decision of the Supreme Court of Louisiana in the cause under consideration was erroneous. It was, also assumed by the Supreme Court of Louisiana,

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
48 U.S. 172, 12 L. Ed. 655, 7 How. 172, 1849 U.S. LEXIS 341, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/erwin-v-lowry-scotus-1849.