Lynn v. . Lowe

88 N.C. 478
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedFebruary 5, 1883
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 88 N.C. 478 (Lynn v. . Lowe) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lynn v. . Lowe, 88 N.C. 478 (N.C. 1883).

Opinions

(Mr. Justice RUFFIN dissenting).

(Colson v. Wade, 1 Mur., 43; Burke v. Stokely, 65 N.C. 569; Aycock v.Harrison, 71 N.C. 432; Doyle v. Brown, 72 N.C. 393; Godley v. Taylor, 3 Dev., 178; Kahnweiler v. Anderson, 78 N.C. 133; Bacon v. Berry, 85 N.C. 124, and case cited; Long v. Cole, 72 N.C. 20; Askew v. Capehart, 79 N.C. 17;Kemp v. Kemp, 85 N.C. 491, and cases cited approved). *Page 479 The plaintiffs commenced their action by suing out process in the late superior court of Wake, returnable to spring term, 1868, against the defendant Cannady Lowe, as administrator of Hugh E. Lynn, principal, and Joseph Scott and others, sureties, on the guardian bond of the intestate, to recover the amount of the trust fund in his hands.

Upon the return of the writ, the defendants appeared by attorneys, whose names are entered in the cause on the docket.

The record shows that oyer of the bond sued on was craved and had, but not that any pleading or memorandum of such, under the practice then prevailing, accepted as an equivalent, was then or at any subsequent term filed or marked.

On May 3d, thereafter, and before the next term, Joseph Scott died intestate, of which event no notice was taken in the further prosecution of the cause, and no administration was taken on his estate until the issue of letters on February 16th, 1880, to Andrew Syme.

At spring term, 1869, of the present successor superior court, an order of reference was made of George M. Whiting to state an account of the administration of the trust estate, and George H. Snow afterwards, by consent, substituted in his place, as referee, returned his report to the following term.

At a special term held in December, thereafter, a nol. pros. was entered as to the defendant, Stephen Lowe, the report confirmed, and a jury verdict rendered assessing the damages and distributing the amount among the several relators, according to their several shares, at the sum of $5,937.22, and judgment accordingly entered against the defendants, Cannady Lowe and Joseph Scott, personally, as surety obligors, and against the former and others in their representative capacities, representing other deceased obligors, and for the costs of the action.

In February, 1879, the relators sued out a summons against the widow and others, heirs-at-law of Joseph Scott, all of whose *Page 480 names were subsequently stricken out except that of his daughter, Margaret, who is left sole defendant in the action, and at spring term, 1879, filed their complaint setting out the former judgment and a series of partial payment thereon, and alleging that Joseph Scott in his life-time owned a tract of land therein described, and undertook to convey the same to the said Margaret with intent to defraud his creditors, and did execute a deed to her therefor, falsely reciting a valuable consideration as paid; that there are no personal assets of the intestate to be administered and requiring a personal representative; and demanding that the said deed be adjudged fraudulent and void, the residue of said judgment a lien thereon, and that the same be sold and the moneys arising therefrom applied towards the discharge.

The defendants, none of them, were aware of the recovery of the judgment against said Scott, until February 7th, 1879, when process in the last action was served on the defendant, Margaret, and a few days later she procured the issue of letters of administration to said Syme, and he and the other petitioners on the same day commenced the present proceedings, to have the judgment vacated and set aside, as to the intestate.

Upon the hearing, the motion of the plaintiffs to dismiss the petition for alleged informalities was denied, and that of the petitioners for a modification of the judgment refused, and from these rulings the parties respectively, against whom they are made, appeal to this court. Passing by many of the objections raised by the appellees, plaintiffs, to the regularity and legal sufficiency of the method of procedure adopted for the reformation of the original judgment, and the exoneration of the intestate therefrom, mostly of a technical character and belonging to the old system of legal practice, we proceed *Page 481 to consider those based upon the merits of the case, and against the granting of any relief in the premises.

It is insisted that the judgment ought not to be disturbed, after the lapse of so long a period of time since its rendition, and because it is not alleged or shown that there is any meritorious defence to the recovery, of the opportunity of setting up which the deceased debtor has been deprived.

There is a want of harmony in the adjudicated cases cited in Freeman on Judgments in the notes to sections 140 and 153, upon the void or voidable character of a judgment rendered upon an acquired jurisdiction over the person of the debtor, but after his death, whether ascertained and declared in the record or not, and whether it is an irregularity or error in law. But in Colson's Ex'rs, v. Wade's Ex'rs, 1 Murph., 43, in a short opinion, it is declared that the judgment "is erroneous and void in law," having been rendered after the death of the party. So the late Chief-Justice inBurke v. Stokely, 65 N.C. 569, says: "It was the business of the plaintiff to make this suggestion (the death of a defendant), as it is error in fact to take judgment against one who is dead." And later still, RODMAN, J., delivering the opinion in Aycock v. Harrison, 71 N.C. 432, uses these words: "When a party to an action dies after judgment, the action abates, just as it would by his death before judgment, unless it be revived by or against his personal representative, as was provided by Rev. Code, ch. 1, § 1."

In Doyle v. Brown, 72 N.C. 393, READE, J., declares that when a person has never been served with process, nor appeared in person or by attorney, a judgment against him is not simply voidable, but void; and it may be so treated whenever and wherever offered, without any direct proceeding to vacate it. The reason is that the want of process and the want of appearance are shown by the record itself whenever it is offered. It would be otherwise if the record showed service of process or appearance, when in fact there had been none. In such case, the *Page 482 judgment would be apparently regular, and would be conclusive until by a direct proceeding for the purpose, it could be vacated."

This would seem to point out the propriety of the course pursued in the case before us, since, irrespective of the character of the judgment as irregular or erroneous and voidable only when so ascertained and declared, upon its face and in the disclosures of the record it is regular and valid, and can only be assailed and corrected by a direct proceeding. As life is presumed to continue in the absence of any suggestion to the contrary in the record, the defendant, it must be assumed, was living at the time of its rendition, and no evidence collaterally produced will be allowed to either party to controvert its verity.

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Bluebook (online)
88 N.C. 478, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lynn-v-lowe-nc-1883.