McAlpine v. Sweetser

76 Ind. 78
CourtIndiana Supreme Court
DecidedMay 15, 1881
DocketNo. 8123
StatusPublished
Cited by27 cases

This text of 76 Ind. 78 (McAlpine v. Sweetser) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McAlpine v. Sweetser, 76 Ind. 78 (Ind. 1881).

Opinion

Morris, C.

This action was commenced by the appellees for the purpose of compelling George Baumgartner, one of the appellants, to pay over to them the sum of $94, which he held as constable of Pigeon township, and which, as the appellees contend, rightfully belonged to them. The other applicants were made defendants on the ground that they claimed that the money belonged to them.

Two of the defendants below, Gruehn and Baumgartner, made default. The other appellants appeared to the action and moved to strike out portions of the complaint. The motion was overruled. They then demurred to the complaint, which was also overruled, and they answered by a gen eral denial. The cause was submitted to a jury, who returned a verdict for the appellees. The appellants moved for a new trial. The motion was overruled, and Baumgartner ordered to pay the money to the appellees. Exceptions were properly reserved to the rulings of the court, and the evidence is made part of the record by bill of exceptions.

The rulings of the court upon the several motions made by the appellants and upon the demurrer to the complaint are assigned as errors. The complaint states that on the 9th day of December, 1878, the appellants recovered a judgment before one Thaddeus McTernan, a justice of the peace of Pigeon township, Vanderburgh county, Indiana, against the appellant Abraham Gruehn, for the sum of $115.67, and that on the same day they caused an execution to be properly issued on said judgment and placed in the hands of Baumgartner as constable of said township. It is further stated that, on the 5th day of December, 1878, the appellants, George McAlpine, John E. Polk, Henry Hibben, Henry S. Bowman and Earl C. Stinson, to whom said Gruehn was indebted, as partners, commenced a suit against him, before C. L. Roberts, a justice of the peace of said township ; that a summons .was issued in said action, on the said 5th day [80]*80of December, returnable on the 9th of the same month, and served on Gruehn the day it was issued.

It is further stated, that McAlpine, Polk, Hibben, Bowman and Stinson, knowing of the pendency of the appellees'" suit against Gruehn, and that they would obtain judgment against him, on the 9th of December, 1878, the day on which the writ issued in the suit commenced by them against said Gruehn was returnable, that said Gruehn was insolvent, and that, unless they obtained judgment and execution against him before the appellees obtained judgment and execution on their claim, the latter would have priority over them, “wrongfully, fraudulently aud unlawful!}^ procured said Roberts, justice as aforesaid, to render judgment in their favor for $182.35, on the 7th day of December, 1878, two days after the summons was served on said Gruehn; that said Roberts did wrongfully, unlawfully and fraudulently render said judgment, on the 7th day of December, 1878, two days before said summons was made returnable; that, in order to make it appear that said judgment was valid and legally rendered, the said Roberts falsely recited therein, and as a part of said judgment, the following words :

“December 7th, 1878. Come now the plaintiffs, by then attorneys. The defendant also comes, by George W. McBride, his attorney. The defendant waives the usual three days’ notice, and admitted plaintiffs’ claim was correct, just and due, and that judgment might be rendered thereon.”

The plaintiffs aver that it is not true that Gruehn waived the' usual notice of three days, nor that the defendant, or his attorney, consented that judgment might be rendered on said claim, before the expiration of three days ; that Gruehn did not appear to said action, in person or by attorney; that said judgment was fraudulently rendered for the fraudulent purpose of obtaining a prior lien on the property of said' Gruehn, by execution. It is then averred that appellants, on the 7th day of December, 1878, caused an execution to [81]*81be issued on said judgment, so by them fraudulently obtained, and to be delivered on the same day to the appellant Baumgartner, as such constable, whereby they obtained an apparent priority over the execution of the appellees, issued and delivered to said constable on the 9th of said December. It is also stated that all the property of Gruehn was then in the hands of Baumgartner as such constable, on prior executions ; that it was all sold, and after paying costs and prior liens, there remained in the hands of Baumgartner, as such constable, the sum of $94, which, the appellees claim, should be applied on their execution, and not on the execution issued on the judgment of the appellants. Copies of the judgments, executions and the returns thereon are made part of the complaint.

The motion to strike out portions of the complaint embraced that part of it which charged the justice, who rendered the judgment in favor of the appellants, with falsely stating that Gruehn appeared by attorneyand consented to the judgment ; also, other portions charging the justice with fraud. We are not sure that there was error in overruling this motion ; but, however this may be, no harm is shown to have resulted to the appellants by refusing to strike out the matter objected to.

Was the demurrer to the complaint rightly overruled? In determining this question it will be proper to inquire-whether or not the judgment rendered in favor of the appellants by Justice Roberts was good and valid as between the? parties to it; and, if so, do the facts stated in the complaint render it invalid as against the appellees.

The summons in the action was issued and served on the; judgment debtor Gruehn on the 5th day of December, 1878',. and was returnable on the 9th day of the same month. The judgment was taken on the 7th day of December, 1878, two-days before the return day of the summons, and without.any [82]*82appearance by the debtor Gruehn, and, as the complaint charges, without the appearance of any person for him. Did the service of said summons on Gruehn give the justice jurisdiction of his person so that the judgment rendered against him two days before the return day of the summons was not void ?

“From the moment of the service of process, the court has such control of the litigants that all its subsequent proceedings, however erroneous, are not void. If there is anyirregularity in the process, or in the manner of its service, the defendant must take advantage of such irregularity by some motion or proceeding in the court where the action is pending. The fact that the defendant is not given all the time allowed him by law to plead, or that he was served by some person incompetent to make a valid service, or any other fact connected with the service of process, on account of which a judgment by default would be reversed upon appeal, will not ordinarily make the judgment vulnerable to a collateral attack.” Freeman Judgments, sec. 126.

In the case of Isaacs v. Price, 2 Dillon C. C. 347, the court say : “A distinction is to be made between a case where there is no service whatever, and one which is simply defective or irregular. In the first case the court acquires no jurisdiction a,nd its judgment is void ; in the other case, if the court to which the process is returnable adjudges the service to be sufficient and renders judgment therein, such judgment is not void, but only subject to be set aside by the court which gave it, * * or reversed upon appeal.”

In the cases of Glover v. Holman, 3 Heisk. 519, and West v. Williamson,

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Bluebook (online)
76 Ind. 78, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcalpine-v-sweetser-ind-1881.