Montgomery v. Sawyer

100 U.S. 571, 25 L. Ed. 692, 1879 U.S. LEXIS 1851
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedMarch 18, 1880
Docket1016
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 100 U.S. 571 (Montgomery v. Sawyer) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Montgomery v. Sawyer, 100 U.S. 571, 25 L. Ed. 692, 1879 U.S. LEXIS 1851 (1880).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Bradley

delivered the opinion of the court.

The controversy in this case relates to a certain plantation in the parish of Plaquemines, called the “ New Hope or Cedar Grove Plantation.” The appellee, Sawyer, claims it as purchaser at sheriff’s sale under a judgment rendered in February, 1872, by the Fifth District Court of Orleans, at the suit of one James E. Zunts against William and Haywood Stackhouse. The appellant claims under a mortgage 'executed in 1873, by *572 Sarah F. Brooks, widow of Haywood Stackhouse, and tutrix of his minor heirs. It is conceded that the plantation belonged to William and Haywood Stackhouse at the time of the latter’s death in December, 1869; and that after that it belonged to the said William and the succession of Haywood up to and after the time of Zunts’s judgment. It is contended by the appellants that this judgment was void as against the undivided half of Haywood Stackhouse, because he was dead when the judgment was rendered, and the suit, as they contend, had never been revived against the succession of his estate.

The circumstances of the case are briefly as follows: —

William and Haywood Stackhouse were partners owning several plantations, and in January, 1865, to secure to Zunts •the payment of certain notes amounting to $50,000, executed to him a mortgage on a plantation called the “ Bellechasse Plantation.” The notes not being paid, Zunts, in January, 1867, attempted to collect the same by executory process against the Bellechasse plantation. The Stackhouses set up a defence, filed a counter petition, and obtained an injunction. The decision being against them, they appealed to the Supreme Court of Louisiana, and pending this appeal, in December, 1869, as before stated, Haywood Stackhouse died. His widow, Sarah F. Brooks, in her own right and as tutrix of their minor children, was made a party in the cause, and the suit proceeded to judgment, the papers being entitled, as before, in the name of William and Haywood Stackhouse v. James E.- Zunts. In May, 1871, the Supreme Court annulled the judgment of the District Court, and remanded’ the cause for a new trial. On the 20th of February, 1872, the District Court rendered the judgment in question, which was entered and signed in these words: —

“Fifth District Court for the Parish of Orleans.
“ W. & H. Stackhouse )
v. [-No. 18,850.
James E. Zunts. )
“ In this case, for the reasons assigned ’ in the written opinion of the court, this day delivered and on file, it is ordered, adjudged, and decreed that there be judgment in favor of defendant; that the injunction herein be dissolved with costs, and that the said defend *573 ant, James E. Zunts, do have and recover of plaintiffs, William and Haywood Stackhouse, and their surety in the injunction bond, in solido/twenty per cent damages on the amount of the judgment herein enjoined, together with eight per cent interest as allowed in the order of seizure and sale.
“ It is further ordered that the claim for attorney’s fees herein be dismissed.
“ Judgment rendered Feb. 20, 1872.
“Judgment signed March 3, 1872.
(Signed) Chas. Leaumont,
“Judge Fifth District Court, Parish of Orleans."

A certified copy of this judgment, in the above words, was recorded in the recorder’s office of Plaquemines on the 17th of April, 1872.

Meanwhile, the plaintiffs moved for a new trial, and that being refused, on the 13th of March, 1872, they moved for and obtained a suspensive appeal. The order allowing the appeal was as follows, the appeal bond being signed by all the appellants : — •

“ W. & H. Stackhouse )
v. vNo. 18,850.
James E. Zunts et al. )
“ On motion of Roselius & Philips and Horner & Benedict, of counsel for Wm. Stackhouse, Sarah F. Brooks, widow in community of Haywood Stackhouse, deceased and natural tutrix of her minor children, Herbert, Maude, Blanche, and Mabel Stackhouse, and Lilia Stackhouse, wife of J. W. Bryant, duly authorized and assisted by her husband, and the legal heirs of James P. Waters, dec’d, to wit, Henrietta A. Waters, wife of William Stackhouse, and by her husband duly assisted and authorized Mrs. Widow Mary Hpton, widow of Wheelock S. Tipton, dec’d, and William H. Waters, and on suggesting to the court that said appearers and movers have been informed and believe that there is error to their prejudice in the final judgment rendered in the above-entitled case by this hon. court, on the 20th February, 1872, and that they are desirous of appealing suspensively from the same to the Supreme Court of the State of Louisiana, and- on showing that the clerk requires time till the third Monday of April next to make the transcript of appeal', it is ordered that a suspensive appeal be accorded to said appearers and movers from said final judgment to *574 the Supreme Court of Louisiana, the same to be therein returnable on the third Monday of April, 1872, upon said appearers giving bond and security conditioned according to law in the sum of $30,000.”

The cause then proceeded in the Supreme Court, entitled as before. On the 31st of May, 1873, the court affirmed the judgment below. A petition for a rehearing was presented in the names of all the appellants; and, amongst other things, stated, that pending the first appeal Haywood Stackhouse died, and that the petitioners were made parties to the appeal by means of an order which they recite; but that, when the cause went back to the court below for retrial, Zunts omitted to make the petitioners parties to the proceedings- in that court, and that they never made themselves parties by voluntary appearance by counsel or personally; that, on the contrary, the case was proceeded with by Zunts and his counsel, and by the former counsel of William and Haywood Stackhouse, as if the latter were alive; and the petition, in a labored argument, contended that the making of the petitioners parties to the first appeal did not make them parties to the subsequent proceedings. All the points taken in this suit on the subject of want of parties were taken in the said petition for a rehearing.

On the 15th of December, 1873, the petition' for rehearing was refused, and the judgment of the District Court stood affirmed. No notice was taken by the court of the point referred to. Whether it was regarded as untenable, or whether the judgment was left to stand at Zunt’s own risk, — good, at all events as against William Stackhouse, — does not appear..

After the recording of the judgment of the District Court, to wit, on the 7th of May, 1872, a partition was made between William Stackhouse and' the succession of Haywood Stack-house, of the various pieces of property belonging to the firm of W.

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Bluebook (online)
100 U.S. 571, 25 L. Ed. 692, 1879 U.S. LEXIS 1851, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/montgomery-v-sawyer-scotus-1880.