Methodist Episcopal Church v. Pasewalk

259 N.W. 740, 128 Neb. 654, 1935 Neb. LEXIS 85
CourtNebraska Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 29, 1935
DocketNo. 29141
StatusPublished
Cited by35 cases

This text of 259 N.W. 740 (Methodist Episcopal Church v. Pasewalk) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nebraska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Methodist Episcopal Church v. Pasewalk, 259 N.W. 740, 128 Neb. 654, 1935 Neb. LEXIS 85 (Neb. 1935).

Opinion

Thomsen, District Judge.

A will contest requiring about eight weeks’ trial time, in which two juries disagreed, resulted in a compromise between contestants (relatives of deceased) and represented legatees (charitable organizations and old friends of testatrix). Under the terms of the compromise contract, contestants were given about half the estate’s value; certain legatees entitled to specific bequests, some large, abated the same or were classed under the residuary-clause of the will; all bequests were greatly reduced; and the will was admitted to probate. Five specific legatees, to whom, under the terms of the contract, about 35 per cent, of the bequests to them was paid, were not represented by counsel in the settlement, made no general appearance in the trials, were not signatory parties to the contract, and, it was agreed, were not parties in the contest except as they might be such by the jurisdictional notice to all persons interested in the estate, the “in rem” nature of the proceedings.

The objections to the probate of the will were filed in the county court, but the contest was reserved for the district court, to which, after admission of the will in the county court, contestants had appealed. The district court entered a judgment on the compromise by agreement of the contracting parties, ordered payment in district court of amount due contestants, and remanded the cause to the county court for disposition in accordance with such contract. The executor acted on the directions so received, and it was thereafter, August 12, 1930, that the five before mentioned specific legatees were paid their respective reduced amounts. These five thereafter demanded of the executor payment of the remaining total of each of their specific bequests, and being granted an order by the county court to require payment of such by the executor, the latter appealed to the district court [656]*656where the order of the county court was set aside, the district court holding the agreed settlement and judgment entered thereon to have been a bar to any further claim. To set aside the judgment of the district court, four of these specific legatees, John R. Saxton, Methodist Episcopal Church of Tilden, Nebraska, Lillie Pryce and Guy E. Kierstead have. appealed to this court. Other questions in this estate, but not here involved, have been presented heretofore in this court. See In re Estate of Kierstead, 121 Neb. 423, and 122 Neb. 694. The questions, material to a decision, raised by this appeal are hereinafter stated.

First: Are these petitioners bound by the judgment entered on the contract between the litigating parties in the will contest? The defendants contend that the general notice and the in rem nature of the proceeding made petitioners parties bound by any judgment the-court would enter. However, the cause being an appealed inquiry into the validity of the will, the court’s sole function was to determine that inquiry; the district court’s jurisdiction in the first instance extended only to such determination. All persons interested were bound only by a judgment entered within such jurisdictional limitations. The reduction by the court of the amounts due petitioners under the will affected, beyond the permitted limited inquiry, their personal rights to the same extent as if a judgment for the abated amounts had been rendered against them. It seems elementary that such personal rights cannot be invaded by a proceeding in rem.

The general principle is well settled that “jurisdiction of the property does not draw after it jurisdiction of the person, and although there has been a seizure of the res the court does not acquire jurisdiction of the parties in personam.” 15 R. C. L. 642, sec. 85.

The principle is illustrated in the case of Fitch v. Huntington, 125 Wis. 204, a suit in the nature of an action to quiet title against a mortgage in which the trial court found and adjudged that the mortgage and [657]*657note secured thereby had been satisfied, and discharged the mortgage of record. In a subsequent suit on the note defendant contended that the note was discharged and all personal liability terminated in the former case, although there had been constructive service only and no personal service on the defendant in such action. The court, however, held that the trial court in the first case had jurisdiction to discharge the mortgage of record, but that the court had no jurisdiction to adjudicate the defendant’s personal rights and that the judgment was not effectual to bar a personal recovery on the note. To the same effect see Combs v. Combs, 249 Ky. 155, in which it is said, quoting 2 Black, Judgments, sec. 792, an analysis taken from a Vermont case, Woodruff v. Taylor, 20 Vt. 65: “A judgment in rem is founded on a proceeding instituted, not against the person, as such, but against or upon the thing or subject-matter itself, whose state, or condition, is to be determined. It is a proceeding to determine the state, or condition, of the thing itself; and the judgment is a solemn declaration upon the status of the thing, and it ipso facto renders it what it declares it to be.”

In the Combs case is stated the general rule taken from 1 R. C. L. 328, sec. 13, and 15 R. C. L. 848, sec. 322, that proceedings to enforce personal rights and obligations as between individuals are in personam; and personal judgments adjusting the rights and obligations between the affected parties cannot be rendered without personal service on or entry of appearance by defendant.

It is this distinction in actions in rem and in personam which marks the right to declare a status or enforce personal rights, or, as here, the right to determine the amount which a legatee shall receive.

As pointed out by Mr. Justice Holmes in Becher v. Contoure Laboratories, 279 U. S. 388: “A judgment in rem binds all the world, but the facts on which it necessarily proceeds are not established against all the world.” Similarly the principle is stated in a Missouri case: [658]*658“The statement that judgments in rem are . binding on the whole world is true only in a restricted sense. The judgment establishing the status of a person or thing or the title to property is conclusive on every one; but not so of the related findings of fact, no matter how necessary to the result. * * * The effect on the res cannot be disputed, but to extend the finality of the judgment to its inducing conclusions of fact, when the same facts are later at issue in a collateral action not affecting the res, would be to make the judgment in rem operate' in personam.” State v. Fidelity & Deposit Co., 317 Mo. 1078.

“That the proceeding was in rem, and that all the world were parties thereto, may be conceded. It will also be conceded that, ordinarily, a judgment in rem, rendered by a court of competent jurisdiction, is binding on all persons, and is not open to collateral attack. But it does not necessarily follow that the whole world are bound by every matter litigated and judicially determined in the proceeding of which such judgment is the product. The principal relief sought in a proceeding in rem is usually an adjudication upon the status of some person or thing, and the judgment, ipso facto, renders the status of such person or thing what it declares it to be. Woodruff v. Taylor, 20 Vt. 65.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
259 N.W. 740, 128 Neb. 654, 1935 Neb. LEXIS 85, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/methodist-episcopal-church-v-pasewalk-neb-1935.