Hunt v. Mayfield
This text of 2 Stew. 124 (Hunt v. Mayfield) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
The bill of exceptions taken by the plaintiffs in the Court below, brings before this Court the transcript of the record on which the suit was brought, and presents for consideration a question of considerable magnitude; and which, in principle, is also involved in several other cases now- pending in this Court. The question relates to the effect of a judgment obtained in a sister State, against a defendant residing out of the same, and where there has been no personal service of the process. No objection is found to the sufficiency of the certificates, either of the clerk or presiding justice of the Court; but it is insisted, and was so adjudged below, that in legal acceptation, this is not a record on which a judgment can be rendered in this State.
It will he observed, that it is not in any way shewn that [128]*128the defendant Mayfield, was not an Inhabitant of TenneSr see, nor that ho was not subject to the jurisdiction of the Court there, at the time the proceedings were had against him. Ii is not our intention to extend the rule of decision jn -j-jpg case beyond the principles necessarily involved in it; or to declare the kind or nature of defence which would be available against a judgment rendered in a different State or nation, where there has been personal service, of process, the proceedings conformable to the laws of the country, and the record certified in due form. Here there was no personal service of the process, or appearance by the defendant, which would have been tantamount to actual notice; the Court appears to have proceeded according to the law of that State, upon the ground of constructive notice, arising from the facts, that the defendant was the principal debtor in the note referred to, the plaintiffs his securities, and that, they had paid and satisfied the same, after judgment obtained against them as such, in that State.
This recovery appears to have been authorised by the ^aw ®tate’ anc^ tbc form pursued.
For a time the doctrine prevailed in ilie State of New York, that a judgment from a sister State was to be regarded as a foreign judgment; that it was only prima facie evidence of the debt, and that the defendant could plead nil dtbel to an action of debt brought upon it. The decisions however of other tribunals, appear to have yielded in a good degree to the paramount authority.
I concur however, in the view taken of the decision in Mills v. Duryee, by the Supreme Court of New York, in the case of Shumway v. Stillman,
The effect of these rules of decision is conceived to be, that where the proceedings appear to have been conducted conformably to the laws of the State in which they were had, defence for the want of jurisdiction in the Court, either over the subject matter in contest, or the person of the defendant, can only be made by special plea in bar; con[130]*130sequently, the judgment rendered in this case must be reversed, and the cause remanded; unless the plaintiffs be willing to abandon their claim to interest since the date of the judgment in Tennessee, and accept a rendition of judgment here for the same amount of that judgment. The law of interest in another State is in the nature of evidence, requiring the intervention of a jury, and subject to opposition from the adverse party.
The plaintiffs consenting to abandon the interest, judgment is rendered for the amount of the judgment, on which the suit was brought.
Judgment reversed and rendered.
Cooke's R. 267, 464, 466. Scott's Revi. 1 vol. 703, 1171.
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2 Stew. 124, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hunt-v-mayfield-ala-1829.