Jasper v. Batt

264 P.2d 409, 76 Ariz. 328, 1953 Ariz. LEXIS 174
CourtArizona Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 23, 1953
Docket5646
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 264 P.2d 409 (Jasper v. Batt) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Arizona Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jasper v. Batt, 264 P.2d 409, 76 Ariz. 328, 1953 Ariz. LEXIS 174 (Ark. 1953).

Opinion

STANFORD, Chief Justice.

This is an appeal from an order granting plaintiffs’ motion to vacate a judgment theretofore entered in favor of defendant. To understand the difficult and interesting *330 legal questions presented by the appeal, we shall set forth the facts in some detail.

Charles Batt and seven of his minor children were passengers in an automobile owned and being driven by one Floyd Cassidy, and on September 3, 1950, near Ciénega Wash in Pima County, on the Tucson-Benson Highway, the Cassidy car collided witri á car being driven by one C. M. High-tower. As the result of this collision, four of the Batt children were killed, and the father and the other three children were grievously injured.

On October 10, 1950, Charles Batt as plaintiff, individually, and as next of friend to his three surviving children, brought an action in the Pima County Superior Court against defendant, C. M. Hightower, alleging his negligence as the proximate cause of the injuries and deaths.

Personal service of the complaint and summons was had upon the defendant Hightower in Pima County. On October 14, 1950, Mr. Hightower, before answering, died at St. Mary’s Hospital in Tucson, as a result of the injuries received by him in the collision. Decedent Hightower and his wife, Nellie B. Hightower, were at all times domiciliaries of the state of California, and owned property therein.

The Los Angeles Superior Court appointed the widow, Nellie B. Hightower, executrix of the last will and testament of her deceased husband, and she qualified as •such. No steps were taken to have ancillary probate proceedings initiated in Arizona, but on November 28, 1950, by written agreement of counsel representing all parties to the pending action, it was stipulated that “Nellie B. Hightower, as Executrix under the Last Will and Testament of Clark Matthews Hightower, the above named defendant, now deceased, be and she is hereby substituted as party defendant in the above entitled matter.” On the same date the Pima County Superior Court entered its order of substitution. Later that day an answer to the merits was filed by the executrix.

Trial was had before a jury on the issues presented by the pleadings, and on September 22, 1951, the jury returned a unanimous verdict in favor of defendant Nellie B. Plightower, as executrix under her husband's last will and testament, and against all of the plaintiffs. There is no contention that errors were committed at trial. Upon motion of counsel for defendant, judgment was entered on the verdict the same day rendered.

On October 24, 1951, plaintiffs filed a motion to vacate the said judgment upon the grounds:

“1. That the Court lacked jurisdiction to enter the judgment of September 22, 1951.
“2. That the Court lacked jurisdiction over the subject matter insofar as said judgment is concerned.
“3. That the Court lacked jurisdiction over Nellie B. Hightower in that *331 * * * (she) had no right, power or authority to represent the estate of Clark M. Hightower (in Arizona), and as a result the said estate was not a party to the action as far as said judgment is concerned.”

This was the first time that plaintiffs had raised any objection whatever to the court’s jurisdiction to hear and determine the case or to enter said judgment, or as to the power or capacity of Nellie B. Hightower to appear and defend said action as executrix. In their brief they concede that four days before trial (when Mrs. High-tower’s deposition was taken in California) they knew her appointment as executrix stemmed from an order of the California court and that no estate proceedings were pending in Arizona. The trial court, on December 1, 1951, granted plaintiffs’ motion to vacate the judgment, “for the reason that the court is without jurisdiction to enter said judgment.”

It further appears from the record that counsel for defendant Nellie B. Hightower, executrix, in both oral argument and in the memoranda opposing the motion to set aside the judgment, urged that if the court believed there was a defect of party-defendant it should grant an extension of time within which Nellie B. Hightower might qualify as executrix in ancillary proceedings to be initiated immediately in Arizona, in order that she might be substituted in such capacity as defendant in said action. Counsel urged that if such substitution were made, under the rules of civil procedure and statutes and laws of Arizona, it would have the legal effect of a trial amendment relating back to the filing: of defendant’s answer. On the other hand, plaintiffs urged upon the trial court that the problem of a defect of party defendant was not involved, and accordingly objected to the requested delay, arguing that the proposed substitution could not cure the jurisdictional defect. By granting the motion to vacate judgment, the trial court in effect adopted plaintiffs’ theory and refused to permit the requested substitution. This refusal is assigned as error.

Defendant Nellie B. Hightower, as executrix, gave timely notice of appeal from the order granting the motion to vacate the judgment, and perfected this appeal. After the appeal was docketed, the parties, without waiving their respective contentions, stipulated that Norval W. Jasper, who on October 3, 1952, had received from the Pima County Superior Court letters of administration with the foreign will annexed of the estate of Clark M. Hightower, deceased, be substituted as party defendant in this cause and as the appellant in this appeal. An order permitting the substitution according to the terms of the stipulation was entered October 4, 1952, in this court. This substitution establishes the fact that there was property in the state within the jurisdiction of the lower court. In .oral argument it was admitted that the *332 jurisdictional basis for the appointment of Jasper was a policy of public liability insurance.

While defendant-appellant presents four separate assignments of error, he states the primary question involved is:

“Did the Superior Court of Arizona have jurisdiction in the action before it to render judgment against the plaintiffs and in favor of defendant Nellie B. Hightower as executrix under the last will and testament of Clark Matthews Hightower, deceased, in accordance with the verdict of the jury?”

In fact, the controlling question is whether the court had jurisdiction over the subject matter of the action — the power to try the case and render the judgment.

It is elementary that the parties cannot by stipulation or otherwise create jurisdiction and thereby confer upon the court a power- not given by law. The source of the power of the court is the constitution and statutes and it cannot be increased nor altered by consent or agreement. If it had no power to try the litigation or render the judgment with the foreign executrix representing the Arizona estate, such could not be conferred by stipulation and in that event the trial and the judgment were an empty effort.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
264 P.2d 409, 76 Ariz. 328, 1953 Ariz. LEXIS 174, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jasper-v-batt-ariz-1953.