Moore v. Easley

18 Ala. 619
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedJanuary 15, 1851
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 18 Ala. 619 (Moore v. Easley) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Moore v. Easley, 18 Ala. 619 (Ala. 1851).

Opinion

CHILTON, J.

Bushrod W. Bell, by Lea & Hines, his attornies at law, brought an action in the County Court of Perry against Moore,, the plaintiff in error, to recover the amount of a promissory note for $200, signed by said Moore and one W. H. Carey. Afterwards, at the February Term of said County Court, the writ having been duly executed and the defendant failing to appear, a judgment by default was entered against him on the note described in the declaration, for $285 33. On the Sth day of July 1847, Moore filed in said court his petition, setting forth the death of Bell at the time of the rendition of said judgment; that he had no recollection of the writ in the cause having been served upon him — had no knowledge of the pendency of the suit, and that be had paid the money to Carey at Bell’s request, and that Bell agreed to look to Carey alone for payment. The petitioner prays that an execution which has issued on said judgment against him and one Jack F. Cocke, his security in a forfeite*d forthcoming bond, may be superseded, and that the judgment on which it issued be declared null and void. Upon this petition a supersedeas was awarded. Afterwards, at the July Term 1847, the same was dismissed by the court, at the instance of the attornies. for Bell.

At the July Term 1848, the record recites that Moore and Cocke .“came by their attornies, and also came Messrs. Lea & Hines, original attornies of record in the suit of Bell against Moore, representing themselves as attornies for the defendant, and in his behalf deny his death before the issuance of the exe[621]*621cution sought to be quashed, as set forth in the petition for supersedeas. And the said plaintiffs take issue with them as to said plea, and the said plaintiffs now before the court withdraw their motion, as set forth in' their petition, to set aside and to declare null and void said judgment on which said execution issued, and now only insist before the court, and move it to quash the execution set forth in their petition, and do not ask or move to set aside the said judgment, and insist before the court that said judgment shall not be set aside: But it appearing to the satisfaction of the court that said Bell died before the said judgment was rendered, and said Lea & Hines moving said court, and wishing said judgment should be set aside — It is therefore considered that the said executions mentioned in the said petition, be quashed, annulled and held for nought, and the judgment annulled and set aside, &c.”

It was further ordered, as a part of the same entry, “that the cause of Bushrod W. Bell v. John B. Moore be re-instated upon the trial docket, which is resisted and objected to by the attorney of said Moore, to which they excepted,” &c. Then follows an entry re-instating the cause, next the suggestion of Bell’s death, and the revival of the action in the name of Easley, as his administrator, and a judgment by default in the name of Easley as such, for $325.

To reverse this judgment, the defendant, Moore, brings the case to this court upon writ of error: And he insists, first — That we cannot look to that portion of this record which relates to the supersedeas, and that it should constitute no part of the record of the proceedings in this case. It is unnecessary, in our opinion, to decide whether the proceedings had upon the supersedeas form a part of this cause or not. It is quite certain that the setting aside of the first judgment rendered in the name of Bell, after his death, forms a part of this cause, and that shows that when the judgment was set aside and the cause re-instated upon the trial docket, the defendant, Moore, was present in court by his attorney, objecting to the same, and excepted to the ruling of the court. It is very clear then, that this appearance dispenses with the necessity of notice, so far as the motion to set aside the original judgment and re-docket the cause is concerned. — Wheeler et al. v. Bullard, 6 Por. 352; Hobson & Sons v. Emanuel et al. 8 ib. [622]*622442; Moore v. Phillips, ib. 567. This much of the entry we are bound to regard, as it relates to and forms a part of the history of this cause.

2. It is. however, objected that the order setting aside the first judgment is a nullity, since it was made upon the motion of Messrs. Lea & Hines, the attornies for Bell, whose authority as such ceased with Bell’s death. Ordinarily, the powers of an agent or attorney cease upon the death of the principal, but the rule is not of universal application. There may be powers, coupled with an interest, which survive. It is not, however, necessary to inquire in this case, what the duty of an attorney at law is with reference to a cause in which he is employed, after the death of his client; for if we concede he is bound to do nothing more than to suggest his death upon the record, so that the proper parties may be made — if, in other words, his powers in regard to the cause cease, as the counsel for the plaintiff in error contend, then the counsel for Bell had no authority to move for judgment after his (Bell’s) death, and having caused an unauthorised, irregular judgment to be rendered, it was their duty to rectify the error, or mistake, and to place the cause in statu quo. It required no authority from Bell to undo an unauthorised act, which had never been sanctioned or ratified by the principal, and which was prejudicial to him, or rather to his estate. But the objection may be sufficiently answered in this, that it does not appear that the authority of the attorney was called in question in the court below; this being the case, the objection that he appeared without authority cannot be raised in this court. — See Noble v. The Bank of Kentucky, 3 Mar. R. 263; 1 U. S. Dig. 328, § 70.

3. The next inquiry is, had the County Court the power to set the original judgment aside, and to re-docket the cause? It is well settled that where the court has jurisdiction of a cause and renders a final judgment, no amendment can be made, after the expiration of the term, unless it be the correction of some clerical misprision. But if the court proceeds to render judgment where it has no jurisdiction, it may, at a succeeding term, cause the facts to be placed on reeord, and declare the invalidity of the judgment. — See Exparte Sanford, 5 Ala. 562, and cases there cited.

In Hood & Stinnett v. Mobile Br. Bank, 9 Ala. 335, a judg[623]*623ment was rendered against several persons, one of whom was dead. Four years after its rendition, a motion was made to vacate it as to the deceased defendant, and to continue its vitality as to the others. The Chief Justice, in delivering the opinion, said, “The judgment against Douglass’ (the dead party) was a nullity, and it was entirely competent for the court so to declare it, that an execution might regularly issue against the other defendants.”

In Stewart v. Nuckles, 15 Ala. 231, it is said that a judgment rendered against either party after his death, and which cannot be refered by relation to a day previous, is a nullity which will not sustain an .execution, and may be recalled on writ of error, coram vobis.- And in Halford v. Alexander, 12 Ala. 280, it was held, that, when the judgment upon such proceeding was recalled, .the suit stands in the same condition that it occupied before the-judgment was rendered.

The cases above cited .from our Reports, and the numerous authorities refered to in them, may suffice to show, that, as there was in fact no plaintiff when the judgment was rendered in the name of Bell, such judgment was a nullity, and it.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Wasson v. Cooper
187 So. 706 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1939)
Ex Parte Fidelity Deposit Co. of Maryland
134 So. 861 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1931)
McDonald v. Womack
107 So. 812 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1926)
Merchants' Laclede Nat. Bank v. Troy Grocery Co.
43 So. 208 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1907)
Mitchell v. Commissioners Court
116 Ala. 650 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1897)
Helmer v. Minot
27 N.Y.S. 79 (New York Supreme Court, 1894)
Rosenberg v. Claflin Co.
95 Ala. 249 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1891)
Watt v. Brookover
13 S.E. 1007 (West Virginia Supreme Court, 1891)
Ford v. Tinchant & Brother
49 Ala. 567 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1873)
Waddill v. John
48 Ala. 232 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1872)
Hunt's Heirs v. Ellison's Heirs
32 Ala. 173 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1858)
Ex parte Remson
31 Ala. 270 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1857)
Jones' Adm'r v. Brooks
30 Ala. 588 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1857)
Moore c. McGuire
26 Ala. 461 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1855)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
18 Ala. 619, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/moore-v-easley-ala-1851.