Hull v. Rolfsrud

65 N.W.2d 94, 1954 N.D. LEXIS 80
CourtNorth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedMay 28, 1954
Docket7414
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 65 N.W.2d 94 (Hull v. Rolfsrud) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering North Dakota Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hull v. Rolfsrud, 65 N.W.2d 94, 1954 N.D. LEXIS 80 (N.D. 1954).

Opinion

GRIMSON, Judge.

This is an action. to quiet title to the Northeast Quarter (NEj4) of the Southwest Quarter (SW%) ; East Half (EVk) of the Northwest Quarter (NWj;4) and Lot Two (2) of Section Nineteen (19), Township One Hundred Fifty-two (152), Range Ninety-six (96), McKenzie County, North Dakota. The plaintiffs, as trustees, claim title to this property under a trust established, by the last will and testament of one J. Y. Hull, and the final decree issued thereon by the. county court of McKenzie County. The defendant makes a general denial, claiming the invalidity of the trust included in the final decree and setting forth his title under a quitclaim deed covering said property, signed by the legal heirs of J. Y. Hull, who also are the beneficiaries of the alleged trust and include the plaintiff trustees. ' In a counterclaim based on the quitclaim deed the defendant asks that the title be quieted in him and the plaintiffs’ claims be adjudged null and void. The district court found for the defendant and plaintiffs appealed demanding a trial de novo.

The first issue raised by the plaintiffs is that the defendant has no right to make a collateral attack upon the final decree of distribution. They state, correctly, that a final decree of distribution is of equal rank with the judgments of other courts and has the same immunity from collateral *98 attack. Joy v. Elton, 9 N.D. 428, 83 N.W. 875; Fischer v. Dolwig, 29 N.D. 561, 151 N.W. 431; Krumenacker v. Andis, 38 N.D. 500, 165 N.W. 524; Knight v. Harrison, 43 N.D. 76, 174 N.W. 632; Dolphin v. Peterson, 63 N.D. 792, 249 N.W. 784.

It is generally held that a judgment cannot be collaterally attacked by a party to the action or by one in privity with a party. 49 C.J.S., Judgments, § 413, page 817; Lamb v. King, 70 N.D. 469, 296 N.W. 185; 31 Am.Jur. Judgments, § 581, p. 179; Tuttle v. Tuttle, 48 N.D. 10, 181 N.W. 898. Plaintiffs claim that the defendant is in privity with them by reason of the quitclaim deed he received from the heirs of J. Y. Hull and under which he claims.

The evidence shows that Mr. Rolfsrud, the defendant, is not related to the parties in any way. He was not made a party to the probate proceedings nor served with any notice of them. Whatever interest he has under the quitclaim deed was obtained by him some three years before the probate proceedings in question were commenced. His rights whatever they are were not in issue in the probate proceedings nor are they derived through any issue decided in said probate proceeding. He had no right of control over those proceedings or- right of appeal therefrom.

In 72 C.J.S., Privity, page 958, it is said:

. “The word ‘privy’ is the root of the common word ‘privity,’ and as a noun is defined as meaning a person who has succeeded to some right or obligation which one of the parties to the act derived through the act or incurred under it; * * *. In order to make a man a privy to an action he must have acquired an interest in the subject matter of the action either by inheritance, succession, or purchase from ■ a party subsequently to the action, or he must hold property subordinate^.” (Citing cases.)

In Leach v. First Nat. Bank, Fort Dodge, 206 Iowa 265, 217 N.W. 865, 868, it is said:

“Privity is said to be a mutual or successive relationship to the same rights of property, and if it is sought to bind one as privy by an adjudication against another with whom he is in privity, it must appear that at the time he acquired the right, or succeeded to the title, it was then affected by the adjudication, for, if the right was acquired by him before the adjudication, then the doctrine cannot apply.” (Emphasis supplied.)

To the same effect are the following cases: Gill v. Porter, 176 N.C. 451, 97 S.E. 381; Orthwein v. Thomas, 127 Ill. 554, 21 N.E. 430, 435, 4 L.R.A. 434; Kahn v. Richard L. Walsh Co., 72 Misc. 20, 129 N.Y.S. 137, 139; Central Oregon Irr. Co. v. Young, 107 Or. 39, 213 P. 782, 784. See also 50 C.J.S., Judgments, § 788, page 324; Weed Sewing Machine Co. v. Baker, C.C., 40 F. 56, 1 McCreary 579; See also Sailer v. Mercer County, 77 N.D. 698, 45 N.W.2d 206, 22 A.L.R.2d 988. In Boswell’s Lessee v. Otis, 9 How. 336, 13 L.Ed. 164, it is well said:

“No principle is more vital to the administration of justice, than that no man shall be condemned in his person or property without notice, and an opportunity to make his defense.”

The cases cited by the plaintiff involved collateral attacks on judgments by those who had been parties to the action or who had succeeded to the interest of parties after the judgment involved. Tuttle v. Tuttle, 48 N.D. 10, 181 N.W. 898; Lamb v. King, 70 N.D. 469, 296 N.W. 185.

The will involved in this action was made in December 1922 by one J. Y. Hull, a resident of Oshkosh, Wis. He died April 7, 1928. In that will, after providing for the payment of his debts and leaving some personal property to his wife, he bequeathed and devised the residue of his estate, of which the land here involved was a part, to his wife, Esther V. Hull, his son, Lath-rop W. Hull, and one A. T. Hennig of Oshkosh, Wis., as trustees, to manage and care for, sell, invest and reinvest said property and to pay the net annual income therefrom to his wife until her death or until she *99 remarried. The trustees were given full power to handle the property and if the- income was not sufficient at any time to properly care for his wife they could use any or all of the principal necessary for that purpose.

The will then provided further:

“In case of the remarriage of my wife, I give, bequeath and devise to her an undivided one-third of all the balance, remainder and residue of my said trust estate;
“And the remaining two-thirds thereof, in case of her remarriage, and all of said trust estate in case of her death without remarriage, shall go to and be paid over and delivered to, and I do hereby give, bequeath and devise the same, in such cases, to my three children, Lathrop W. Hull, Gertrude Hull Felker and Ella J. Hull Ewens, equally. Provided, however, that if any of my said children shall not have arrived at the age of thirty years at the time of the remarriage or death of my wife, that then and in such case, the share of such of my children as have not arrived at the age of thirty years shall continue to be held by my said son and said A. T. Hennig, as trustees, or by the survivor of them in the trust, until such child or children shall respectively reach the age of thirty years, when the share of each child arriving at the age of thirty years shall be paid to them, and after the remarriage or death of my wife, such child shall receive the net incomes from their share of the trust fund quarterly, until arriving at the age of thirty years. * * *

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Bluebook (online)
65 N.W.2d 94, 1954 N.D. LEXIS 80, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hull-v-rolfsrud-nd-1954.