Hammond & Draper v. Wilder & Locke

25 Vt. 342
CourtSupreme Court of Vermont
DecidedMarch 15, 1853
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 25 Vt. 342 (Hammond & Draper v. Wilder & Locke) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Vermont primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hammond & Draper v. Wilder & Locke, 25 Vt. 342 (Vt. 1853).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Redfield, Ch. J.

Two questions arise in the present case. 1. If a writ of attachment, returnable before a justice, in a different county from that in which it is served, be served by attaching property, less than twelve days hefore the return day, and no appearance is made by defendant, and judgment is given by default, is the judgment valid?

[346]*346We think it must he admitted by every lawyer, that this is matter of abatement, and abatement only, when the defendant does appear. It could not be pleaded in bar of the action. It is no ground of a writ of error. If not pleaded strictly in abatement, it would no doubt be regarded as waived.

Is there any such case, where the defect has been held fatal to the proceeding, when the defendant does not appear ? So far from this, it is true, that even matters of error, and which, on writ of error, would be held fatal to the proceeding, when fully apparent upon the record, do not render the judgment void. There is no case, in which the judgment of a court of record, of general jurisdiction, has been held void, unless for a defect of jurisdiction. This seems to be conceded in argument, and it is attempted to make this defect amount to a want of jurisdiction. But this is certainly a new view of the subject. It is but a defect of service, and not more important than thousands of other defects. It was never supposed before, that because the proper time was not given to a defendant to prepare for trial, the whole proceedings were rendered utterly void. And it is impossible to make this result from the form of the provisions of the statute. If we extend such a doctrine to one case, we must to all; and if it apply to justice courts, it must to the County Court, and to this court.

And to he consistent, we shall have to extend it to all omissions of the statute requisites, either in the writ or service, if apparent on the face of the proceedings. If a writ of summons is served by reading, the party may disregard it, and the judgment is void. This would certainly work a very important change upon this subject, and one of immense consequence, in a practical point of view —one which will virtually overthrow the whole doctrine of the conclusiveness of judgments, and make them to depend altogether upon their entire regularity, in regal'd to all the preliminary proceedings, so far as they appear on the face of the papers, which is a very precarious reliance, and which leaves every thing in such a state of uncertainty, as to render nothing .stable or secure, and virtually to encourage speculation and litigation.

It is true, that this whole doctrine of the conclusiveness of judgments, even against the proof of express fraud of the grossest character, in their concoction, is altogether one of policy, and one which it is somewhat difficult to explain to the full and ready com[347]*347prehension of the unprofessional mind; but still a doctrine, which lies at the very foundation of every system of rational jurisprudence, and which is altogether indispensable to the quiet and good order of society.

A man of unsophisticated mind would naturally conclude that it would be wise to hold all judgments void, when it appeared, on the face of the proceedings, that any statute requisite is omitted; and we all begin life with some such sweeping notions of specific equity, but we soon find that these things have to be disposed of as we go along, each in its proper time, and made conclusive often upon a short limitation. And the moment we infringe the integrity of the rule, that matters of abatement to a writ, if not strictly pleaded, are forever waived, it would become necessary to have one continuous session of this court, to try pleas in abatement, to judgments rendered at all times within the statute of limitations.

This matter has been considered as so long settled in this State, that it is not probable it would ever have been attempted to be raised, in any other form, except in abatement, as has always been done heretofore, had it not been for the case of Nelson v. Denison, 17 Vt. 73. And that case only decides, that as to persons, not parties to the suit, such attachment creates no lien, not even by consent of the debtor, and that this question is in no sense affected by the judgment, because other attaching creditors are not parties to the proceedings. That made the case a very close authority in the case of McKenzie v. Ransom, 22 Vt. 324. For in that case, the’ claimant was not a party to the trustee process, in its inception;, and ordinarily is not to be concluded by matters inter alios.

But the ease of Nelson v. Denison has no analogy to the present case, as that controversy ivas between one attaching creditor and another, not parties to the proceedings in question, and of course not concluded by them. In that case the other attaching creditors were not in a situation to be concluded by the proceedings, and on general principles, could not object to the irregularity in the very suit, and might therefore properly be allowed to take the course they did, to try the question, i. e. attach the same-property.

But here the party has ample remedy by appearance and plea in abatement, and if he does not choose to take the remedy which the law gives, he has no one to blame but himself. The consideration, that it is possible to suppose extreme cases, does not alter [348]*348the principle of a rule, — extremes prove nothing. If the time is so shortened, as to render it practicably impossible for the parly to appear, it would no doubt be regarded as a fraud, and the remedy of audita querela be applied to it, or a remedy given by bill in equity, as has often been done in the State of New York.

It is scarcely needful to quote authorities upon this subject; the books are full of cases. In matters of abatement the result is the same, whether the party omit to appear, or appearing, do not plead them in time, or plead them and have them decided against him. And in my judgment, it would be just as plausible to allow the defendant to defeat a judgment, in an action of debt upon it, upon matter of abatement, when it had been pleaded and overruled in the previous proceedings unlawfully, as to allow this judgment to be defeated upon the ground claimed.

2. It may be made a question, whether, if the judgment is valid, how the officer will stand as to the party to the suit. Is he a trespasser in the original taking ? For there are no doubt cases, where the officer is clearly a trespasser, that the service is so far valid, that if the party does not appear, the judgment is valid. Such is the decision of Kelly v. Paris, 10 Vt. 261, where the writ was served by a special officer, not appointed in conformity to the statute.

But we think the officer should not be here regarded as a trespasser. There is no defect in his authority, and no express prohibition upon the face of the writ, as to the time of service, like that in an execution.

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Bluebook (online)
25 Vt. 342, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hammond-draper-v-wilder-locke-vt-1853.