Illinois Trust & Savings Bank v. Town of Roscoe

194 N.W. 649, 46 S.D. 477, 1923 S.D. LEXIS 64
CourtSouth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 2, 1923
DocketFile No. 5018
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 194 N.W. 649 (Illinois Trust & Savings Bank v. Town of Roscoe) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering South Dakota Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Illinois Trust & Savings Bank v. Town of Roscoe, 194 N.W. 649, 46 S.D. 477, 1923 S.D. LEXIS 64 (S.D. 1923).

Opinions

SHERWOOD, J.

On December 1, 1899, the circuit court of Edmunds county, on default, made and signed the following instrument, omitting the names of parties and venue:

“Judgment.
“The above entitled action having come on for hearing at chambers.in the town of Ipswich, in the county of Edmunds, and state of South Dakota, on the 1st day of December, A. D. 1899, the plaintiff appearing by its attorney, C. H. Barron, and no one appearing for the defendant, and it appearing from the summons and complaint herein that more than thirty days have elapsed since the service of said summons and complaint, and no one appearing for the said defendant, in any manner, and no answer or demurrer having been served, as required by said summons, and the court being fully advised in the premises:
“On motion of C. H. Barron, attorney for the plaintiff, it is ordered that the plaintiff, Illinois Trust & Savings Bank, have [479]*479and recover judgment against the defendant, town of Roscoe, for the sum of $734.40, together with its costs and disbursements herein amounting to $7.50, and in the aggregate to the sum of $741.90.
“By the Court:
“Loring E. Gaffy, Judge.
“Ed. J. Engler, Clerk.
“By G. M. Engler, Deputy.”

No paper, in this action, was filed until September 29, 1909, nearly 10 years thereafter. Then the summons, complaint, affidavit of service, affidavit of default, and the paper entitled “Judgment,” were all filed and entered as a judgment in the office of the clerk of courts of Edmunds county.

No further steps, were taken in the case until June, 1921, more than) 11 years after the papers were filed, when plaintiff applied for a writ of mandamus to compel the board of trustees of the town- of Roscoe to levy a tax to pay this alleged judgment.

Defendant answered in legal effect pleading two defenses:

First, nul tiel record.

Second, this action was based on certain coupons to. five bonds given by said town, which bonds since the signing of this judgment had been declared by the United States District Court invalid.

Findings and judgment for plaintiff, and defendant appeals.

This is a proceeding in scire- facias brought as a civil action, under our Code, R. C. 1919, § 2781. It is collateral to the judgment; and defendant’s attack through it is a collateral attack on the judgment. 15 R. C. L., p. 838, § 311; 23 Cyc., p. 1064, § 2; Howard v. City of Huron, 5 S. D. 539, 59 N. W. 833, 26 L. R. A. 493.

The following facts appear from the face of the record before us:

(A) The instrument plaintiff relies on as a judgment was signed December 1, 1899.
(B) No paper in this ..case was filed in any court for nearly 10 years.
(C) No act was done showing, plaintiff relied on this judgment, or would seek to enforce it, except the filing of the papers [480]*480above referred to, for more than 20 years after this judgment or order was signed.
(D) The affidavit, of service of summons was not sworn to until December 14, 1899, 14 days after the signing of the paper entitled “Judgment.”
(E) The affidavit of default was not sworn to until December 16, 1899, 2 days, after the affidavit of service was made out and 16 days after the judgment or order was signed.
(E) Tire summons and complaint were served by a private person, and in his affidavit of service he did not state he was over 21 years of age at the .time of such service.

The only recital concerning service in the instrument relied on by plaintiff as. a judgment is, “it appearing from the summons and complaint herein that more than thirty days have elapsed since the service of the said summons and complaint.”

It is said in 15 ¡R. C. L., p. 895, § 374:

“While as before seen it is generally held that presumption in favor of judgment of courts of general jurisdiction is conclusive on collateral attack where no want of jurisdiction is apparent of record, yet it is equally well settled that suph judgments may be collaterally attacked when want of jurisdiction affirmatively appears from an inspection of the record. Presumptions are indulged in only to> supply the absence of evidence, or averments respecting the facts presumed, and cannot be resorted to when it affirmatively appears from the pleadings or evidence, that jurisdiction did not exist. Hence the presumption which the law implies in support of judgments of courts of general jurisdiction arises only with respect to facts concerning which the record is silent. When the record speaks at all it must be understood to speak the truth as to the particular fact of which it speaks, for by the law of its creation, it can tell no lies neither direct nor circumstantial. This is so not only when the record speaks in favor of the jurisdiction, but when it speaks against it. A fact can never be presumed in the face of statements to the contrary in the record, and if the recordi states what was done it will not be presumed that something different was done. A presumption never arises that a recital of facts in the record is incomplete or incorrect, and when the record states the evidence or makes an averment with reference to a jurisdictional fact, it will be understood to speak [481]*481the truth on that point, and it will not he presumed1'that there was other or different evidence respecting the fact, or that the fact was otherwise than as averred. Were thi,s not so it ’would never be possible to‘ attack collaterally the judgment of a superior court,, although a want of jurisdiction might be apparent upon its face; the answer to. the attack would always 'be that, notwithstanding the evidence or the averment, the necessary facts to support the judgment are presumed. When1 a presumption is to be drawn from a record, the whole record must be inspected, and a party is entitled to have the whole record, because he has a right to insist that the presumptions applicable to judgments of courts of general jurisdiction shall be applied only when it is ascertained from an inspection of the whole record that it does not affirmatively appear therefrom, that the court did not have jurisdiction to render the judgment. Hence it is a rule that the whole of a record must be looked into in determining the question whether or not a want of jurisdiction is apparent upon the face of the record. If the writ, inspected as part of the record to overthrow the adjudication or recital in the judgment of due process, is an irreconcilable contradiction of the recital, the invalidity of the judgment may be declared collaterally; but if the contradiction' may be reconciled by a construction of the writ not absolutely at variance with reason and sound policy, a construction by the recital so given cannot be assailed collaterally. A ’finding of the court that service had been duly made according to the law 'has been held not to be contradicted by merely showing that a .summons which was legally insufficient had in fact been published.”

And in section 375:

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Illinois Trust & Savings Bank v. Town of Roscoe
194 N.W. 649 (South Dakota Supreme Court, 1923)

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Bluebook (online)
194 N.W. 649, 46 S.D. 477, 1923 S.D. LEXIS 64, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/illinois-trust-savings-bank-v-town-of-roscoe-sd-1923.