New York Casualty Co. v. Lawson

24 S.W.2d 881, 160 Tenn. 329, 7 Smith & H. 329, 1929 Tenn. LEXIS 110
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 1, 1930
StatusPublished
Cited by40 cases

This text of 24 S.W.2d 881 (New York Casualty Co. v. Lawson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Tennessee Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
New York Casualty Co. v. Lawson, 24 S.W.2d 881, 160 Tenn. 329, 7 Smith & H. 329, 1929 Tenn. LEXIS 110 (Tenn. 1930).

Opinion

Mr. Special Justice Williams

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This is a suit to enjoin the enforcement of a judgment at law. The defendant demurred to the bill; the chancellor sustained the demurrer; and the complainant has brought the case by appeal to this court.

The bill set forth the proceedings and exhibited the record in the action wherein the judgment attacked was obtained. Such proceedings were substantially as follows :

On September 17,1928, C. C. Lawson caused an attachment to be issued by a justice of the peace against the property of Robert Harris and the Bird Motor Company. No ground was stated to authorize the issuance of the attachment. The affidavit upon which it issued merely alleged that Robert Harris and the Bird Motor Company were justly indebted to C. C. Lawson in the sum of $1000' damages for injury to his car done by a certain Buick car driven by Robert Harris. . While both the affidavit and the attachment stated that suit had been commenced by a summons and that the amount laid therein was $1000', no summons actually issued. The Buick car was seized under the attachment by the sheriff. No publication was made to bring either Harris or the Motor Company before the court.

*333 . However, on September 26, 1928, Robert Hurst, as principal, and the New York Casualty Company, as surety, made what they inaccurately styled a forthcoming-bond, payable to the sheriff and C. C. Lawson in the sum of $1000. It referred to the attachment proceedings and the seizure of the Buick car thereunder, stated that the car was the property of Robert Hurst, who had been misnamed as Robert Harris in the attachment proceedings, and asserted that such proceedings were illegal and void and that no appearance was made therein except to challenge their validity and to obtain possession of the car pending a determination thereof. The condition of the bond was that in the event the attachment was sustained Robert Hurst should restore the car or its reasonable value to the sheriff to satisfy any judgment the court might pronounce. The bond was taken and the car turned over to Robert Hurst.

Thereafter, on October 4, 1928<, Robert Hurst, by his attorney, filed a written motion to quash the attachment, stating therein that he appeared specially and solely for that purpose. The grounds of the motion were that the court' had no jurisdiction to issue the attachment; that no ground therefor was stated in the affidavit upon which it issued, and that it was neither original process nor ancillary to any pending cause. Thereupon Lawson moved the court to be permitted to amend the attachment so as to reduce the amount therein laid from $1000 to $500 and to allege that at the time of the injury the Buick car was being wilfully run in excess of thirty miles per hour upon the highway and that the defendant to the attachment was about secretly to move his property out of the county. The justice of the peace granted the motion to amend, overruled the motion to quash, and *334 gave judgment orally in favor of Lawson for $500', but without making any record entry thereof. Filing the oath in lieu of bond, Robert Hurst appealed the case to the circuit court.

Further than to appeal Robert Hurst did not appear in the circuit court but allowed the action there to proceed without making any defense to it. On February 28, 1929, the circuit court rendered judgment, sustaining the attachment, and awarding Lawson a recovery of $499'.99 against Robert Hurst, principal, and the New York Casualty Company, surety, upon the replevy bond. The judgment provided that if within twenty days the Buick car should be delivered to the clerk of the circuit court to be sold by him, the proceeds of such sale would be credited on the judgment and the defendant therein released to that extent. The car was not delivered to the clerk and he issued execution on the judgment on March 29, 1929. After collecting by garnishment $1G:.09 of Robert Hurst, the sheriff made a nulla bona return- May 29, 1929.

Lawson then advised the Commissioner of Insurance and Banking of the refusal of the New York Casualty Company to pay the judgment against it, and asked that its license to do business in Tennessee be revoked on account of such refusal; and the Commissioner notified it that its license would be revoked unless it either - paid the judgment or took proper steps to test its validity.

Thereupon it filed the present' bill, detailing the proceedings above set out and insisting that the judgment was void-for the following reasons: (1) No ground was stated to warrant issuance of the attachment; (2) there was no summons or publication to bring defendants before the court; (3) the attachment being fatally defective *335 in matter of substance could not be amended so as- to cure it; (4) the amount claimed in the attachment, being $1000 damages, was in excess of the jurisdiction of the justice of the peace and, consequently, in excess of the appellate jurisdiction of the circuit court; (5) the amendment reducing this amount to $500 merely reduced the amount laid in the attachment without reducing the amount claimed in the suit incident to the attachment; and (6) the justice of the peace did not sustain the attachment or render any judgment thereon and, therefore, the circuit court did not acquire any jurisdiction of the proceedings by reason of the attempt to appeal to that court. The prayer of the bill was that the judgment be declared void and that C. C. Lawson be perpetually enjoined from proceeding to enforce it as against complainant.

The grounds of defendant Lawson’s demurrer to the bill were: (1) The judgment, if not a proper one, was at most merely erroneous and not void, and' the chancery court, not being a court of review, had no jurisdiction to interfere with the enforcement of the judgment; (2) since complainant’s principal on the bond, Robert Hurst, had made no question of his liability, the complainant could not do so, but was bound by the judgment agáinst him; (3) no fraud, accident, mistake, or other ground for equitable relief was alleged; (4) complainant had a full, adequate, and complete remedy at law,; and (5) complainant was estopped to deny the legality of the bond or the attachment proceedings under which complainant obtained the automobile.

Sustaining the demurrer, the chancellor decreed Lawson a recovery upon appellant’s injunction bond for the amount of the judgment, interest and costs-.

*336 Thus the question arising below upon the pleadings and presented here by the assignments of error is whether the judgment is such that a court of chancery ought to intervene to prevent its enforcement. A court of chancery is not a court of review to correct errors committed by other courts, and it will not enjoin, a judgment or decree merely because such judgment or decree is erroneous. But it will enjoin a judgment or decree which isi void or one which is voidable for certain reasons recognized as grounds of equitable relief. Gibson’s Suits in Chancery, section 814; Ridgeway v. Bank, 30 Tenn. (11 Humph.), 523; Bell v. Williams, 38 Tenn. (1 Head), 229.

The bill does not impeach the judgment as voidable upon any such ground of equitable relief.

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Bluebook (online)
24 S.W.2d 881, 160 Tenn. 329, 7 Smith & H. 329, 1929 Tenn. LEXIS 110, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/new-york-casualty-co-v-lawson-tenn-1930.