Fulliam v. Drake

75 N.W. 479, 105 Iowa 615
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedMay 20, 1898
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 75 N.W. 479 (Fulliam v. Drake) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fulliam v. Drake, 75 N.W. 479, 105 Iowa 615 (iowa 1898).

Opinion

Deemer, C. J.

— In 1874, F. A. Drake recovered a judgment against George W. Fulliam for the sum of eight hundred dollars. Fulliam died in the year 1893, leaving’ eight children as his only heirs. Four of these children .are the appellants, in this action. M. B. Drake became the owner of the judgment by assignment, and after the death of Fulliam she commenced proceedings, under section 3092 of the Code of 1873, asking the court to ■award her execution .against certain real estate which she claimed belongedto George W. Fulliam, at the time of his death. She made all the heirs parties to this proceeding, but it is. now claimed that but two of them, to-wit, J. D. Fulliam and E. B. Fulliam, in addition to J. D. Fulliam as administrator of the estate, were served with notice or appeared to the proceedings. In that ■•action the court, after hearing the evidence adduced upon the issues as tendered, awarded the execution as prayed. The defendants, therein appealed to this, court, where the order was affirmed. See Drake v. Fulliam, 98 Iowa, 339. After the affirmance', execution issued and was levied upon the real estate described in the order, .and this action was brought to restrain further ■action upon the execution, and to set aside the order awarding the execution, upon the ground that, the court [617]*617which awarded it was without jurisdiction because all the owners of the property were not made parties •defendant to the proceeding, because the original judgment was not a lien upon the premises, and. for the further reason that the appellants herein showed an independent record title in themselves. It is also ■claimed that the enforcement of the order will deprive plaintiffs of their property without due process of law. It is further alleged that E. B.. J. D., and S. J. Fulliam are the owners and in the present possession of the property. The petition reciting these facts, as well as some others which we do- not regard as controlling, was presented to the trial court for the allowance of a temporary writ of injunction. Appellee Wiley alone .appeared to the proceedings, and filed a demurrer to the petition based upon the ground that plaintiffs were not entitled to the relief demanded, because of defect of parties, plaintiffs, and defendants, and one other ground not necessary to be stated. This demurrer was sustained, and the temporary injunction ashed for denied.

[618]*6183 [617]*617The real parties in interest in this controversy were parties to, served with notice of, and appeared in the special proceedings for award of execution. In that action these plaintiffs denied that George W. Fulliam died seized of any part of the real estate against which award of execution was ashed, and alleged that they, with S. J. Fulliam, owned the said real estate. They also pleaded some other defenses not necessary to be mentioned. They did not plead, however, that- the other heirs, were not served with notice and did not appear to. the petition. On the contrary, the record of the court made upon the hearing of the application recites that all the defendants appeared by attorneys Hanley & Detwiler, and introduced their evidence. That. E. B. and J. D. Fulliam are concluded by what was in fact adjudicated in. that proceeding is clear, and this adjudication is final, [618]*618unless grounds, exist for a new trial or for equitable interference. That they are also, bound as to all matters which should have been pleaded in defense to that, unless facts .appear justifying a re-trial, or unless, as claimed by appellants, the court which awarded the •execution was without jurisdiction, is equally clear. These propositions are so elementary as not to need the citation of authorities in their support. It is manifest that this is not an application, either at law or in •equity, for a re-trial. If it were, it should not be granted, for the reason that the parties to the original proceeding are not all made parties to this suit, and some of the persons made parties to this suit were not parties to that. Treating this case, then, as an application for a re-trial to vacate or reverse the original order, under sections. 3154 to 3162, inclusive, of the Code of 1873, the appellees.’ demurrer to. the petition was properly sustained, because of non-joinder of proper parties. If this be, as. we think it is, an original suit in equity to enjoin the enforcement of an order because the court making it was without jurisdiction, we then have the question, were appellants entitled to the relief demanded-?

Appellants insist that the court had no jurisdiction to make the award — First, because but two of the eight ■heirs were served with notice of the proceeding; second, because the judgment was not a lien upon the real estate -against which execution was awarded; and, third, because the record title to the real estate was not in George W. Fulliam at the time of his death.

4 From the statement we have heretofore made of the issues tendered in the special proceedings, it will be seen that the second and third grounds of the objection to the jurisdiction of the court were pleaded in defense to that proceeding, and were adjudicated against the appellants in the order granted by the court. Having been so adjudicated, they cannot [619]*619be reviewed by .a suit in equity, as a court of equity has no power to review or correct errors in a proceeding at law. See Code 1878, section 2522. This is the rule'independent of statute. 1 High, Injunction, section 226.

The court which awarded the execution had jurisdiction of the subject-matter and of the only parties in interest who now claim- that there was -error in the proceedings, and to grant them the relief asked because of the matters now under consideration would be converting a court of equity into- a court for the correction of errors.

5 The only remaining point made by appellants is that the court was without jurisdiction to- make the order because the heirs of George W. Fulliam were not all served with notice of the application. Conceding, for the purpose of the case, that the order finding that all the parties appeared may be contradicted, we are still confronted with this state of facts: All of the petitioners in this case who have any interest in the land were served with notice of, and appeared to, that application. They did not, it is tru-e, plead a defect of parties. Nor does the record show -that they raised the question in any manner. The inquiry here arises, was it nece-s-sary to- do- so? The general rule, -subject to some exceptions, is. that a judgment is conclusive, not only as to all matters actually in issue, but as to those which might o-r should have been alleged in the pleadings. Donahue v. McCosh, 81 Iowa, 296; Hanson v. Manley, 72 Iowa, 48; Foster v. Hinson, 76 Iowa, 714; Keokuk Gas Light & Coke Co. v. City of Keokuk, 80 Iowa, 137. The case must be treated, then, as if the court decided in the original proceedings that all the necessary parties were before it. This may have been an -erroneous decision, but it does- not follow that •the court had no- right to- decide because all of the parties were not before it. It had jurisdiction of the [620]*620subject-matter; that is to ©ay, the .award of execution against the property of one deceased. It also, bad jurisdiction of all the person© who. are parties to. this suit having any interest in the land. Having this jurisdiction, it had the right to decide, as it did, that execution should be .awarded.

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Bluebook (online)
75 N.W. 479, 105 Iowa 615, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fulliam-v-drake-iowa-1898.