Fitzpatrick v. Stevens

114 Mo. App. 497
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedNovember 6, 1905
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 114 Mo. App. 497 (Fitzpatrick v. Stevens) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fitzpatrick v. Stevens, 114 Mo. App. 497 (Mo. Ct. App. 1905).

Opinion

JOHNSON, J.

This is a suit in equity to set aside a judgment charged to have been concocted in fraud. The court, upon hearing, granted the relief ashed, and defendant appealed.

Plaintiff introduced evidence tending to sustain the following facts: In 1894 J. K. Miller Stevens executed and delivered to his brother, Edward A. Stevens, his promissory note for |400, bearing interest at eight per cent per annum. During the following year the payee accepted from the maker a steel safe in full payment of the note and interest. Edward, however, did not surrender the note, assigning as his reason that he had lost it. On October 10, 1901, J. K. Miller Stevens died in Jackson county, and plaintiff was duly appointed administrator of his estate. Afterwards, on December 16, 1901, Edward presented the note to the probate court for allowance, claiming that the whole of the principal and interest, amounting in all to six hundred and twenty-three dollars and fifty cents, was past due and unpaid, and supported his demand by filing his affidavit as required under Revised Statutes 1899, section 195. The administrator (the plaintiff here) appeared but not being advised of any fact indicating that the note had been paid offered no defense, and judgment was given demandant for the amount stated, from which no appeal was taken. Some months thereafter (just when is not shown) the administrator first learned, from another brother of the deceased, the facts and circumstances of the payment of the note, but took no action affecting the judgment until an effort was made by the executrix of the estate of Edward (who died in the meantime), to enforce its collection. Plaintiff then began this proceeding on December 7, 1903.

[500]*500We find, as did the learned trial judge, that the weight of the evidence adduced is in favor of the plaintiff’s assertion, that the debt was paid in full during the lifetime of the intestate, and that Edward, designing to defraud the estate, presented what he knew to be a fictitious demand, and procured the exercise by the probate court of jurisdiction over it through a false affidavit, by which practice he intended to deceive both the' plaintiff and the court. Further, we are of the opinion that plaintiff was not in any manner negligent in failing to offer the defense of payment, for the reason that he did not know of the fact, nor of any other facts, to incite special inquiry and investigation. Any person of ordinary prudence, in his position, probably would have been misled, as was he, into believing the demand genuine when confronted by the note, upon which it was founded, bearing the signature of the intestate, and the affidavit of his brother, its holder, that it evidenced an unpaid debt, against which there was no defense.

But whether his conduct may be denominated negligent or careful, this action cannot be maintained if it appears that Edward’s fraud was confined to matters which were, or could have been made, the subject of juridical inquiry in the proceedings before the probate court. Fraud in such respects may be of the most flagrant, even criminal character, but relief will be denied in all actions, except that in which the judgment was rendered, and there only upon proper steps taken in the time prescribed by law. The principle upon which the rule is founded ignores the fact of the degree of care actually exerted by defendant in making his defense. He may have been never so diligent but, if he permits a defense to escape him, is as conclusively bound by the judgment as he would have been under conduct the most negligent. He must present his defenses in the time and manner allowed him and is estopped from saying that he was deceived or misled by his opponent in' anything pertaining to the merits. Being given his [501]*501day in court, the presumption is conclusive that he is at fault if he fails to make everything out of his case that could he made. To borroAV a term from another class of cases, his assumed negligence, not the fraud of his opponent, is the proximate cause of his misfortune.

But when the fraud of his adversary is in the very concoction and procurement of the judgment, the case falls outside the domain of the principle discussed into that of another, which may be stated in this wise: Where the defendant is free from actual negligence and has been deceived by fraud practiced by his opponent for the purpose of misleading the court, either into the assuming of jurisdiction over a cause or into proceeding Avith the trial of one over which jurisdiction has been obtained, and, misled by the deception, both the court and'defendant have acted as neither would but for such fraud, a judgment so extorted is not to be considered the solemn pronouncement of the court, but the offspring of iniquity and should be set aside in equity provided the defendant has acted with due diligence to discover the fraud and upon its discovery is without legal remedy in the action in Avhich the judgment was obtained.

Turning- now to the case before us, we find that the essential facts stated in the affidavit filed by Edward under Revised Statutes 1899, section 195, were not extrinsic to the merits of the demand presented to the probate court for adjudication. That is to say, the fact of the payment was one which the administrator could have put in issue had he known of its existence, and his want of knowledge of this fact which, together with the other facts shown, made the demand fictitious and fraudulent, will not sustain him here without it appears that the filing of the false affidavit of itself operated to deceive the administrator and the court, the former into making no investigation, and the latter into assuming jurisdiction over the demand. We have already shown in what manner the administrator became the innocent victim of the fraud. The probate court certainly would have [502]*502refused to proceed had the demand not been verified as required by the statute.

It is well settled that such verification is a condition precedent to the exercise of jurisdiction over the demand. [R. S. 1899, sec. 195; Williams v. Gerber, 75 Mo. App. l. c. 30; Perry v. Alford, 5 Mo. l. c. 503; Bank v. Ward, 45 Mo. l. c. 311; Dorn v. Parsons, 56 Mo. l. c. 602; Million v. Ohnsorg, 10 Mo App. l. c. 437; Bick v. Tanzey, 181 Mo. l. c. 524; Burnett v. McCluey, 78 Mo. l. c. 689; Hargadine v. Van Horn, 72 Mo. 370.] It is a step preliminary to the conferring of jurisdiction. That the instrument which set the court in motion involved none but intrinsic facts made it none the less a fraudulent device, without which the court could not have acted. Through it the proceedings reached the hand of the court tainted with fraud. To thrust a thing so corrupt in its inception into court was a fraud upon the administration of justice and no judicial act innocently performed for its effectuation could serve to purge it of corruption. The case therefore possesses all of the elements for equitable action. Among the authorities sustaining the views expressed are the following: Hamilton v. McLean, 169 Mo. 51; Wonderly v. Lafayette County, 150 Mo. 635; Mayberry v. McClurg, 51 Mo. 256; Ramsey v. Hicks, 53 Mo, App. 190; Link v. Link, 48 Mo. App. 345; United States v. Throckmorton, 98 U. S. 61; Freeman on Judgments, secs. 489 and 491; 2 Story on Equity Jurisprudence, secs. 1572 and 1575; Herman on Estoppel and Res Judicata, sec. 242.

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Bluebook (online)
114 Mo. App. 497, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fitzpatrick-v-stevens-moctapp-1905.