Lemmon v. Herbert

24 S.E. 249, 92 Va. 653, 1896 Va. LEXIS 27
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedMarch 12, 1896
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 24 S.E. 249 (Lemmon v. Herbert) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lemmon v. Herbert, 24 S.E. 249, 92 Va. 653, 1896 Va. LEXIS 27 (Va. 1896).

Opinion

Riely, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court. "

Henry Rozier Dulaney was the owner of the estate in Fair-fax county called Shuter’s Hill.” By his will, which was admitted to probate in the County Court of the said county in 1839, he devised the said estate to his daughter Rebecca, upon condition that she cause to be erected thereon a monument to her mother and sister at a cost of $6,000, and that her husband, upon her marriage, should take the name of Henry Rozier Dulaney. He further provided in his will that if she declined to take the estate upon these conditions, then it was to go to her brother, Grafton Shelton Dulaney, together with the proceeds accruing from rents and otherwise.

Rebecca married Richard H. Dulaney in 1849, and she and her husband received the rents and profits of “ Shuter’s Hill ” as long as she lived. She died in 1858, leaving several infant children and her husband surviving her, without having erected the said monument, and without her husband having taken the name of Henry Rozier Dulaney, as required by the said will.

In 1866, her brother, Grafton Shelton Dulaney, filed his bill in the Circuit Court of Fairfax county against her husband and children, in which he set' forth the devise of the said estate to his sister Rebecca, and charged that the conditions of the devise had never been complied with ; that the estate, in consequence thereof, passed by the limitation in-the will to him at her death, together with the rents and profits ; and prayed that the same be decreed to him, and such accounts be taken as were proper. A guardian ad litem, was appointed for the infants, and their answer filed by him. Their father also filed' his answer. The cause was then, by consent of parties, by counsel, removed to the Circuit Court of Alexandria, in which court, in December, 1866, it being heard on the bill and the will, filed as an exhibit therewith, [655]*655and upon the answer both of the infants by the guardian ad litem and also of the adult defendant, the court, construing the will, decided that the conditions of the devise to Rebecca Dulaney not having been performed, the limitation over of the estate to the complainant took effect, and decreed that the defendants surrender the estate to him.

He shortly thereafter conveyed the estate to John A. Carter and ~W. W. Herbert upon certain trusts, by virtue whereof the estate became the property of H. Grafton Dulaney upon his coming of age. At his death, which occurred December 8, 1890, he devised it, along with other property, to Arthur Herbert, Richard D. Roszell, and Julian T. Burke, upon certain trusts, with power to sell the said estate. The trustees having sold a part of it, and the heirs at law of Rebecca Dulaney having, after such sale, claimed title to Shuter’s Hill, the former filed their bill in the Circuit Court of Fairfax county against the said claimants and Richard H. Dulaney, their father and the husband of Rebecca Dulaney, deceased, to remove such cloud from their title to the said estate. The defence to the suit was based on the alleged invalidity of the proceedings in the former suit, wherein it was held that the right of Rebecca Dulaney to the estate under the devise thereof to her was forfeited, and that the estate passed to Grafton Shelton Dulaney. Upon the hearing of the cause, the court decided that the children and husband of Rebecca Dulaney had no valid claim, or right to the estate, and ordered that the trustees be quieted in their title to it. From this decree an appeal was taken to this court.

It is to be o'bserved at the outset that the attack upon the decree of the court in the former suit was not by any direct proceeding to correct or annul it, if erroneous, but altogether collateral, and made twenty-five years after the decree was rendered.

The first ground relied on by the appellants in support of [656]*656their contention is that the bill set forth no ground of equitable jurisdiction, but was merely a declaration in ejectment in disguise; and that the remedy of the complainant for the enforcement of his claim, if valid, was full, adequate, and complete at law. This cannot be said to be a just description of the bill, but it is not our province, nor our purpose, to attempt to vindicate the correctness of the decree. Conceding, however, for the sake of argument, that the complainant had a complete remedy at law, and that the bill alleged no sufficient ground for the jurisdiction of a court of equity, still the decree would not be void and liable to collateral attack. It was a regular bill in chancery, and the case was proceeded in, without objection, in accordance with the pleadings and practice of a court of equity to a final decree. The bill was filed in, and the decree made by, a court of general jurisdiction over the subject matter of equitable rights, interests, and remedies. “ The power to bear and determine a cause is jurisdiction.” The court here had the power to decide whether the case made by the bill was within the jurisdiction of a court of equity ; and, having proceeded in the case to a final decree, must of necessity have determined that question in favor of its jurisdiction. It may have erred in its decision, but such error would not avoid its decree. The decree would merely be erroneous, but conclusive until reversed or vacated. This court could not determine whether the case was one of equitable jurisdiction or not without an inquiry into the facts, and where inquiry is necessary the decree, however erroneous, is not void. Fisher v. Bassett, 9 Leigh 119, 131; Cox v. Thomas, 9 Gratt. 323, 328; Gibson v. Beckham, 16 Gratt. 321, 326; and Cardoza, Sheriff, v. Epps, Sergeant, &c., decided at the last term.

“ The proceedings and judgment of a court of chancery or of a court clothed with equity powers,” says Mr. Pomeroy in his Equity Jurisprudence, sec. 129, “ are not necessarily null [657]*657and void because the action is not one which comes within the scope of the £ equity jurisdiction,5 in the common acceptation of that phrase; or, in other words, because the claim is one for which there is a full, adequate, and complete remedy at law.55 And again, after defining ££ equity jurisdiction,55 he says further, in sec. 130: “At the same time, if a court clothed with equity jurisdiction as thus described should hear and decide, according to equitable methods, a case which did not fall within the scope of the equity jurisprudence, because both the primary right invaded constituting the cause of action and the remedy granted were wholly legal, and belonging properly to the domain of law courts, such judgment, however erroneous it might be and liable to reversal, would not necessarily be null and void.55

In Goodman v. Winter, 64 Ala. 410, 433, Brickell, chief justice, said: £! Where a court of superior or of general jurisdiction is presented with a case of such character that, before rendering a final decree or judgment; it must determine whether it has jurisdiction to pass such judgment or decree as is invoked, and it is passed, collaterally the jurisdiction cannot be assailed nor the validity of the judgment or decree be drawn in question. The court has power to hear and determine, and the case is coram judicel And further on he says: “ It [the decree] may be erroneous, and it may be that, on demurrer or motion to dismiss for want of equity, the chancellor should have dismissed the bill. These were questions he had jurisdiction to decide, and if he erred the law points the mode of correcting the error.

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Bluebook (online)
24 S.E. 249, 92 Va. 653, 1896 Va. LEXIS 27, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lemmon-v-herbert-va-1896.