Montgomery v. Rich

3 Tenn. Ch. R. 660
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedApril 15, 1878
StatusPublished

This text of 3 Tenn. Ch. R. 660 (Montgomery v. Rich) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Montgomery v. Rich, 3 Tenn. Ch. R. 660 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1878).

Opinion

The Chancellor :

The complainants claim the lot in controversy by deed from William Long, executed on June 16, 1870, and registered on the next day. The defendants claim a mechanic’s lien on the lot for work and labor and materials in the erection of a house thereon, by virtue of proceedings commenced before a justice of the peace, by attachment issued on June 24, 1870, based on the lien and on the fact that Long, against whom it was sued out, was then a non-resident of the state. The attachment issued and was levied on the same day, the constable making the levy adding, in his return, “ and set for hearing, by consent, June 27, 1870.” The justice’s judgment, rendered on that day, is in these words; This day, the parties appearing, and the defendant waiving advertisement as required by law in attachment cases, I proceeded to hear said case, and from the evidence find that the defendant, Long, is indebted to the plaintiffs $95.18, by account for materials furnished and work and labor done on the house attached in this case, and I therefore give judgment in favor of the plaintiffs against the defendant for $95.18.” The papers in the cause seem to have been returned to the Circuit Court, where the land was condemned and ordered to be sold, no copy of the condemnation being, however, before me. This bill was filed on December 7, 1870, te test the relative rights of the complainants and defendants, and to enjoin a sale under the attachment proceedings. The bill alleges that Long had left the state before the attachment was sued out, and has never returned, and that the recitals of the officer’s return and the justice’s judgment, showing a consent on Long’s part to the trial and te the waiver of the advertisement as required by law, were unauthorized and untrue. The answer of the defendants admits that Long was absent from the state, and. that the consent and waiver were by a particular counsel named, [662]*662as the attorney of Long. Long’s deposition has been taken, and he proves that he was absent from the state, ’knew nothing of the attachment proceedings at the time, and did not employ any attorney to appear for him, nor subsequently ratify what was done. He further proves that he had fully paid the defendants, before the suing out of their attachment, for the work and labor done by them and materials furnished in the erection of the house on the lot in •controversy. This is the only evidence introduced by either party, except the proceedings before the justice in the attachment suit.

The law upon the subject of collaterally impeaching a •domestic judgment, by extraneous proof tending to show the falsity of some fact on which the jurisdiction of the court rests, may be said to be in a transitional state. The old authorities, as we learn from the notes to Crepps v. Durden and Doe v. Oliver, in Smith’s Leading Cases, were neai’ly uniform that, in courts of superior jurisdiction, a jurisdictional fact stated on the face of the record could not be averred against. The rule was otherwise in regard to judgments of inferior courts, and even of superior courts acting without the scope of its general and common-law authority, and by virtue of a special and statutory power. Williamson v. Berry, 8 How. 495. When the powers of an inferior tribunal are limited, either as to the cause of action, its locality, or amount, the restriction cannot be evaded by a •finding or allegation which is contrary to the truth; and if such averment is made of record, it may be disproved, and the judgment set aside collaterally. So, the judgments of inferior tribunals may be impeached and set aside collaterally by proof of want of notice, notwithstanding an express averment or recital on the face of the record or minutes of the proceedings that notice was given. 1 Smith’s Ld. Cas. (7th Am. ed.) 1103,1129. And there has been a strong tendency of late years in the courts of the states, and still more in the Supreme Court of the United States, to allow any jurisdictional fact to be disproved collaterally against a recital [663]*663in the judgment itself of its existence. The law is thus clearly settled where the judgment of one state is sued upon in another. Thompson v. Whitman, 18 Wall. 457 ; Knowles v. Gas-Light Co., 19 Wall. 58 ; Earle v. McVeigh, 91 U. S. 503. So, where the judgment of a state court is •collaterally impeached in the Federal court'sitting in that state. Elliott v. Piersoll, 1 Pet. 328 ; Pennoyer v. Neff, 95 U. S. 714. The state courts will be compelled to follow the decisions thus made to some extent, and have already, in a few instances, gone fully as far in the collateral attack of a domestic judgment. Mastin v. Duncan, 6 Cent. L. J. 328, a decision of the Supreme Court of Kansas, reviewing ■the authorities.

In this state, the distinction between the judgments of courts of superior and inferior jurisdiction has generally been ignored. The weight of authority is that the judgment of a justice of the peace cannot be collaterally attacked by parol testimony, — as, by showing the erasure by the justice of the name of one of the defendants after the rendition of the judgment (Turner v. Ireland, 11 Humph. 447), or by proving that the cause of action was beyond the justice’s jurisdiction. Wilt v. Russey, 10 Humph. 208; Hall v. Heffly, 6 Humph. 444. But see, contra, on the point of jurisdiction, Clark v. Stroud, 1 Swan, 274; Wolf v. Eakerly, 1 Swan, 274.

These decisions are in cases where the judgments were sought to be impeached by a party to them. The case before us is that of a third person who is seeking to avoid the ■effect of the judgment of a justice on realty, the title to which was acquired by such third person previous to the rendition of the judgment. It is not exactly a collateral attack on the judgment. It is rather the assertion of a right which, the bill insists, should not be affected by the judgment. And the question is not so much the invalidity of the judgment, as of the complainant’s right to contest with the defendants, as between them, facts which the de[664]*664fendants may claim as settled in their favor, against Long,, by the judgment.

As a general principle, a transaction between two parties-in a judicial proceeding will not be binding on a third party. “For,” to use the words of De Grey, C. J., in the Duchess of Kingston's Case, 20 How. St. Tr. 355 (2 Smith’s Ld. Cas. 609), “ it would be unjust to bind any pei'-son who could not be admitted to make a defence, or to examine witnesses, or to appeal from a judgment he might think erroneous; and, therefore, the depositions of witnesses-in another cause in proof of a fact, the verdict of a jury finding the fact, and the judgment of the court upon facts-found, although evidence against the parties and all claiming under them, are not, in general, to be used to the prejudice of strangers.” And see Boles v. Smith, 5 Sneed, 105; Simpson v. Jones, 2 Sneed, 36. Accordingly, it has-been held that a mortgagee of laud is not estopped by a judgment, in an action between his mortgageor and a prior mortgagee, reudered after the execution of the second mortgage, but may litigate the amount due upon the mortgage, notwithstanding the prior judgment. Campbell v. Hall, 16 N. Y. 575. Proceedings by attachment are not in rem, but in personam. Green

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Related

Elliott v. Lessee of Peirsol
26 U.S. 328 (Supreme Court, 1828)
Williamson v. Berry
49 U.S. 495 (Supreme Court, 1850)
Thompson v. Whitman
85 U.S. 457 (Supreme Court, 1874)
Knowles v. The Gaslight and Coke Company
86 U.S. 58 (Supreme Court, 1874)
Earle v. McVeigh
91 U.S. 503 (Supreme Court, 1876)
Pennoyer v. Neff
95 U.S. 714 (Supreme Court, 1878)
Campbell v. . Hall
16 N.Y. 575 (New York Court of Appeals, 1858)

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Bluebook (online)
3 Tenn. Ch. R. 660, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/montgomery-v-rich-tennctapp-1878.