Indemnity Ins. Co. of North America v. Smoot

152 F.2d 667, 163 A.L.R. 498, 80 U.S. App. D.C. 287, 1945 U.S. App. LEXIS 3169
CourtCourt of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit
DecidedDecember 17, 1945
DocketNo. 8991
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 152 F.2d 667 (Indemnity Ins. Co. of North America v. Smoot) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Indemnity Ins. Co. of North America v. Smoot, 152 F.2d 667, 163 A.L.R. 498, 80 U.S. App. D.C. 287, 1945 U.S. App. LEXIS 3169 (D.C. Cir. 1945).

Opinion

CLARK, Associate Justice.

This is an appeal from a judgment of the District Court awarding a money judgment to the appellee (Smoot) on the basis of that secured by her in an Illinois action in 1932, and also from an order enjoining the appellant from proceeding in an equity action in Illinois aimed at vacating the 1932 judgment, r

At the outset, the plaintiff brought suit in Vermilion County, Illinois, on a negligence claim arising out of an automobile accident and there recovered a judgment against an insured defendant whose insurance contract required in part that he furnish an acceptable appeal bond should his insurance company (not the present appellant) consider an appeal necessary. At this point the present appellant became surety on the appeal bond. On appeal the plaintiff’s judgment was affirmed, and an action was brought leading to judgment on the bond. Thereafter, the first insurance company went into receivership, and the appellant here became primarily liable.

On September 16, 1944, appellee (Smoot) filed the present suit against Indemnity Insurance Company in the District Court, setting up her Illinois judgment against the defendant. On December 19, 1944, defendant filed an equity action in Vermilion County, Illinois, to set aside the 1932 judgment upon which the plaintiff was relying. January 29, 1945, the District Court entered judgment for the plaintiff on the pleadings and the same day issued an order en- ■ joining the defendant from pursuing the Illinois action or in any way recognizing any judgment resulting therefrom which prejudiced the plaintiff’s rights in this cause. Thereafter, on February 6, 1945, the circuit court for Vermilion County, Illinois, issued a decree declaring the October 5, 1932, judgment of that court to be null and void.

I

As to the money judgment challenged on this appeal appellant urges: (1) that action on the Illinois judgment was barred by the statute of limitations of Illinois; (2) that appellee’s cause of action was barred by laches', and that she was estopped to claim against appellant on the bond; (3) that the District Court erred in failing to hold and determine that the answer of appellant presented issues of fact, which required a trial; and (4) that the court erred in granting appellee’s motion for judgment on the pleadings.

Appellant’s first contention is directly negatived by the applicable Illinois Statute [Ill.Stat.Ann., Sec. 107.284(2) Ill.Rev.Stat. 1945, c. 83, § 24b] quoted in appellant’s own brief, which provides for a twenty year period of limitation'. This contention was [669]*669specifically abandoned by appellant in the oral argument.

Equally untenable is appellant’s S’econd contention that the cause in the District Court was barred by laches on the part of appellee. Admittedly, both parties to this action had been woefully slow in the exercise of their rights, but in the premises such delay cannot operate to extinguish the plaintiff’s right of record, standing unreversed and unchallenged at the time she brought suit upon it as a foreign judgment in the District Court. Even if it be assumed that the plaintiff’s1 Illinois judgment was voidable, it is not subject to collateral impeachment as long as it remained in force.1

We find no strength in the appellant’s contention that the issues raised in its answer required a trial on the merits in the District Court and that therefore the motion for judgment on the pleadings was improperly granted.

It is fundamental that in an action on a judgment the original cause of action cannot be examined on the merits1, the area of attack being limited to jurisdiction and fraud in procurement.2 Moreover, no item of defense may be asserted that existed prior to the judgment and which might have been set up in the original proceedings.3

Thus, the defendant’s allegations .of secondary agreements limiting liability, alleged to have been entered into between it and plaintiff before the original cause of action, did not raise matters into which the District Court was obliged to inquire. It is therefore not required that on this appeal we examine two questions1 necessarily involved in the purported defense, namely, whether the alleged secondary contract was void as against public policy, and whether it was violative of the Statute of Frauds of the State of Illinois.

So far as the money judgment is concerned the whole controversy boils down to the question of the effect, if any, of the equity decree of the Circuit Court of Vermilion County, Illinois, entered on February 6, 1945, whereby it was sought to set aside and declare null and void the original Illinois judgment upon which appellee sued in the District of Columbia.

There can be no doubt that the original Illinois judgment was a valid and subsisting judgment at the time suit upon it was filed in the District Court here. The District Court had proper and complete jurisdiction; no question of service was involved; the subject matter and the parties were properly before the Court. As we have pointed out, the complaint on the foreign judgment was filed here in the District Court on September 16, 1944. It was1 not until December 19, 1944, that a bill in equity was filed in the Circuit Court of Vermilion County, Illinois, to set aside the original Illinois judgment. Later, on January 29, 1945, the District Court here, after hearing, granted the motion of plaintiff (Smoot) for judgment on the pleadings and entered judgment against defendant (appellant here) for the full amount of the original judgment plus interest from October 5, 1932. Only subsequently, on February 6; 1945, was a decree purporting to set aside the original judgment entered in the Illinois Court.

The text of this latest Illinois decree is Set out in full at pages 11-14 of appellant’s brief and after the oral argument a certified copy of this decree was filed by leave of this Court on motion of appellant, over the vigorous opposition of appellee, and may be treated as part of the record on this appeal.

In our view, the decree of the Illinois Court of February 6, 1945, shows clearly and unmistakably on its face that that Court had no jurisdiction to enter this decree. Service on Ada Smoot, the defendant in that suit (appellee here) was by publication only, although it is not disputed that defendant was a non-resident with no property in Illinois which could be or was the subject of attachment. Admittedly, service by publication is not good in actions in personam on non-residents not found within the jurisdiction unless property of the party within the State be the subject of attachment. In order to cure this defect in the service, vital to its jurisdiction in the cause, the Circuit Court of Vermilion County, Illinois, made a finding that “the suit involves a res within the jurisdiction of this Court.” It is tacitly admitted that if the action were in personam the service was fatally defective.

[670]*670But by tradition, equity is said to act only in personam and this principle is of nearly universal application. Thus, by the first test the Illinois proceeding was not in rem.

The appellee in its argument against appellant’s motion to make the Illinois decree a part of the record correctly cited two cases in this’ Court which bear closely on the point in issue. In Backus Portable Steam Heater Company v. Simonds,4

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152 F.2d 667, 163 A.L.R. 498, 80 U.S. App. D.C. 287, 1945 U.S. App. LEXIS 3169, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/indemnity-ins-co-of-north-america-v-smoot-cadc-1945.