Griffin v. Culp

1918 OK 474, 174 P. 495, 68 Okla. 310, 1918 Okla. LEXIS 384
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedAugust 13, 1918
Docket9477
StatusPublished
Cited by37 cases

This text of 1918 OK 474 (Griffin v. Culp) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Griffin v. Culp, 1918 OK 474, 174 P. 495, 68 Okla. 310, 1918 Okla. LEXIS 384 (Okla. 1918).

Opinion

RAINEY, J.

The plaintiffs in error, defendants below, have brought this case to this court for the purpose of reviewing an order of the district court of McIntosh county, Okla., sustaining the motion of defend *311 ants in error, plaintiffs below, for judgment on flie pleadings filed in said cause and from an order denying plaintiffs in error the right to amend their said pleadings. The parties will hereinafter be styled as they appeared in the trial court.

Since, under the decisions of this court a motion for judgment on the pleadings is in the nature of a demurrer, and admits the truth of all facts well pleaded (C. E. Sharp Lumber Co. v. Kansas Ice Co., 42 Okla. 689, 142 Pac. 1016), it is evident that, if the pleadings alleged facts constituting a defense to the plaintiffs’ action the trial court erred. After the action was instituted, a dismissal was taken as to some of the parties, and other parties were brought in, and¡ although the pleadings are rather elaborate, the questions involved in the appeal may be clearly understood from a brief statement of the issues attempted to be joined by the plaintiffs A. W. Culp and H. H. Galbraith and the members of the Griffin family, who will hereinafter be referred to as the Griffin heirs. As to them, plaintiffs’ action was one to quiet title, and in their answers and cross-petitions they alleged that plaintiffs’ title was based upon a void judgment in a partition proceeding; the invalidity of said judgment consisting in the fact that the minor defendants herein, in the action in which the judgment was rendered, were not served with summons, and it did not appear that any order was made in the case appointing a guardian ad litem for them; that the guardian ad litem, who assumed to appear for them, acted at the instance of the plaintiffs: and that Robert Griffin, one of the joint owners of the land and a party .to that action, was also not served with summons and did not appear. In answer to these cross-petitions, the plaintiffs pleaded in detail the proceedings and judgment in the partition suit, and also pleaded another judgment of the district court of McIntosh county, wherein the validity of the judgment in the partition suit was called in question, and a decision rendered upholding the same and decreeing that the defendants and cross-petitioners in the present action did not have any right, title or interest in the lands in controversy. By way of reply the Griffin heirs alleged the invalidity of .the second judgment pleaded by the defendants in the following language.:

“That the several judgments set forth in said answers and cross-petitions were and are void, for the reason that the court had no jurisdiction to render said judgments, and had no jurisdiction over the person of these defendants: that the said decree and proceedings had under the same could not pass title to said land, as to the interest of these defendants, to G. R. Ruby, for the reason that said land was restricted under the laws relating to minor Greek freedmen, and that the court had no jurisdiction to decree the sale thereof in said proceedings; that M. L. Leith, who attempted to appear for these defendants in the proceeding's which resulted in said judgments, had no authority to represent these defendants or Robert Griffin; that said purported judgments were obtained as a result of collusion between G. R. Ruby and the plaintiffs and the persons purporting to act for these defendants, and that there was no real contest made in said proceedings, and no bona fide resistance' to said judgments made on behalf of these defendants, but that said purported judgments were in fact consent judgments; that the court purporting to render said judgments was wholly without jurisdiction or authority to render any judgment Quieting title of said A. W. Gulp and H. H. Galbraith in said land, and was wholly ■wFhout jurisdiction to render any judgment which would defeat the right of these defendants to set up the invalidity of the original judgment in cause 184 in this court.”

The proceedings disclose, and it is admitted by counsel for the Griffin heirs, that the respective judgments referred to recited service of summons on complainants. One of the principal propositions of law relied upon by plaintiffs in support of the action ■of the trial court is that a recital in a judgment that a party was duly served cannot be contradicted by parol testimony. While the authorities are not all in accord on this question, we are satisfied that the weight of authority and the better and safer rule is that where the want of jurisdiction appears on the face of the proceedings, whether éx-pressly or by necessary implication, and whether as to the subject-matter or as to the parties, that the judgment is void, and will be so treated, even in a collateral attack ; but where no such defect appears on the face of the proceedings in the case of a domestic, judgment of a court of general jurisdiction, want of jurisdiction cannot be shown by extrinsic evidence in- a collateral attack, but may be shown on a direct attack.

In Jones’ Commentaries on Evidence, vol. 33,. § 611, p. 877, the grounds upon which this salutary rule is based are stated as follows :

“Very great consideration has been given by eminent jurists to the conflict between principles of policy, which require the judgment to be preserved from collateral attack, and the principles of natural justice, which call for it being disregarded whenever brought in question upon allegation and proof that the party, for instance, had *312 no notice or opportunity of being beard. The principles on which the rule rests are clearly and ably stated by Gholson, J., in a well-known Ohio ease. The learned judge said: ‘As to the judgments of courts of general jurisdiction, the decisions in this state, though perhaps not entirely uniform or consistent, do undoubtedly show a strong inclination to sustain such judgments against indirect or collateral attacks on their ■validity and effect. It appears to have been thought that natural justice is satisfied when notice is required and an impartial tribunal established to ascertain and determine whether it has been given. Nor can it properly be said that such a tribunal has jurisdiction because it has so decided. Its decision is binding because it was authorized to make it, and because public policy, and the respect due to the sovereignty it represents, at least in tribunals acting under the same sovereignty, require tbqt the decision-should be regarded, while it remains on the record unimpeached and unreversed.’ In a Connecticut case of equal renown, the court, dealing with the occasional hardships which the adoption of the rule may entail and answering a suggestion of the possibility of an officer of the court fabricating a record, said: ‘It will not be denied, and has not been on the argument, that when a court has jurisdiction its record speaks absolute verity, because it- is the -record of (he court’s doing’s; and being a court of final jurisdiction, there must be an end to the matter in dispute, if it be possible to reach -that end at all. And it is so neees- ‘ sary that confidence should be reposed in courts of a high character, as well as in the records of such courts, that on the whole, and in view of all the considerations affecting the subject, it is the only safe rule to give the decisions of courts of general jurisdiction full effect so long as they remain in force, rather than to leave them open to be attacked in every way and on all occasions.

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Bluebook (online)
1918 OK 474, 174 P. 495, 68 Okla. 310, 1918 Okla. LEXIS 384, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/griffin-v-culp-okla-1918.