Noonan v. Montgomery

209 P. 302, 24 Ariz. 311, 25 A.L.R. 1251, 1922 Ariz. LEXIS 211
CourtArizona Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 27, 1922
DocketCivil No. 1899
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 209 P. 302 (Noonan v. Montgomery) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Arizona Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Noonan v. Montgomery, 209 P. 302, 24 Ariz. 311, 25 A.L.R. 1251, 1922 Ariz. LEXIS 211 (Ark. 1922).

Opinion

FLANIGAN, J.

This is an action in mandamus, brought by appellant against appellee Montgomery, sheriff of Maricopa county, to compel the execution and delivery to appellant of sheriff’s deed to certain real property of W. W. Bruner, sold under execution issued on a judgment obtained by appellant against Bruner in the superior court of Maricopa county, [313]*313■which judgment was docketed in that court on May-23, 1918. From the return of the sheriff to the alternative writ and other pleadings in the case the following facts appear: Plaintiff’s judgment was for the sum of $135.80 and interest. Execution was issued on this judgment May 20, 1919, and the property sold thereunder, the certificate of sale issuing to plaintiff as purchaser on June 18, 1919. On January 24, 1919, one W. H. Criswell attached the same property in an action brought in the same court, and on April 9,1919, obtained judgment against Bruner for the sum of $1,550 and interest, with foreclosure of the attachment lien. On May 3, 1919, execution was issued on this judgment, and on May 27, 1919, the property was sold thereunder to Criswell, and certificate of sale made to him accordingly. On December 15, 1919, Criswell assigned his interest in the certificate to M. J. Fields, appellee herein, and on December 17, 1919, sheriff’s deed was issued to Fields. Thereupon Fields, claiming to be the successor in interest of Brnner and as such entitled to redeem from the sale to plaintiff (paragraph 1374, Civ. Code 1913), paid to the sheriff (paragraph 1381, Id.) $192.50, being the amount required for such purpose. The sheriff thereupon tendered this money to plaintiff, but she refused to accept it, and brought this action.

Upon the trial of the cause the appellees formally offered in evidence only the “judgment-roll” in the case of Criswell v. Bruner, but under this offer there was actually received in evidence what would appear to be the entire record of the case, being the complaint, original summons with return, affidavit for service of summons by publication, the entry of default for failure to answer, the judgment, the attachment proceedings, a statement of the evidence taken after the entry of default, approved and signed by the jndge in accordance with paragraph 558, Civil Code of 1913, and other papers unnecessary to detail. [314]*314The testimony ‘of F. H. Larsen, Criswell’s attorney, was also taken. Judgment was entered, denying plaintiff the relief prayed for and dismissing the complaint, and the case is before us on the appeal from such judgment.

The questions for determination arise on appellant’s denial of the right of the appellee Fields, who received the sheriff’s deed upon the sale under the Criswell judgment, to redeem, within the six-month period allowed by paragraph 1375 of the Civil Code, from the sale made to appellant. The contention of appellees is that the sheriff’s deed to Fields' under the Criswell judgment and execution issued thereon conferred upon Fields as Criswell’s assignee the right to redeem said property as the successor in interest of the judgment debtor Bruner.

Under these facts it would seem that the right of Fields to redeem could be questioned only in the event that he was not the lawful successor in interest of Bruner in the property, a consequence following only upon the total invalidity of the Criswell judgment. Such, indeed, was the view taken by appellant in the court below, where, as shown by her pleadings, and objections to testimony, the judgment was attacked upon the ground that it was null and void because of lack of jurisdiction of the person of Bruner.

In deciding the. questions made by this attack upon the judgment, we are to be understood as considering that the specific objections in support of that assertion question the sufficiency of the proceedings for failure to observe certain of the statutory requirements with respect to the notice to be given to a nonresident defendant in a proceeding essentially in rem. Notwithstanding general expressions therein about which no point is made, the judgment does not purport to bind the defendant Bruner in person, and under familiar principles it could not so bind him. The statement that the court had no jurisdiction of [315]*315the person of such defendant will therefore be taken as a merely convenient designation of the effect of the failure to observe the statutory requirements referred to, which, it is claimed, made the judgment unauthorized and void.

In the opening brief for appellant the theory upon which the case was presented to the court below is adhered to, the errors assigned being that the judgment is null and void, in that the court did not acquire jurisdiction of the person of Bruner to authorize it to render judgment against him, and, further, that the court erred in holding the affidavit of non-residence filed by Criswell’s attorney, Larsen, to be sufficient, and in holding that a copy of the summons, after the return of the original summons to the clerk of the court with the sheriff’s return, might be published in compliance with the- statute as a valid step in the constructive service. In the reply brief, however, some argument is made and cases are cited for the purpose of showing that the attack upon the judgment is not limited to a challenge of the jurisdiction of the court and the consequent nullity of tlie judgment, but that the proceedings may be regarded as proper in which to avoid the judgment upon showing a merely erroneous exercise of jurisdiction rather than a total want of power. In view of the position taken by appellant in the lower court and in her opening brief in this court, we deem it unnecessary to do more than point out that the attack here is undoubtedly collateral and not direct, and, being such, the sole question for determination upon the record is whether the Criswell judgment was void for lack of jurisdiction. See Bennett v. Wilson, 133 Cal. 379, 85 Am. St. Rep. 207, 65 Pac. 880; 23 Cyc. 1068; Van Fleet on Collateral Attack, § 12, in which some of the cases cited by appellant are referred to and commented upon. Under these authorities there can be no question but that the attack upon the judgment in [316]*316this case must fail, unless the judgment is void, and it does not avail appellant to show that the judgment is erroneous, irregular or for other reasons liable to be reversed or vacated in a direct proceeding’. The appellant is concerned only with the question of the right of Fields to redeem the property, and not with how he obtained the right, which he must necessarily have, unless the judgment upon which it is predicated is void.

Such being the nature of the attack, the question we shall next consider is what proceedings in the Criswell case may be inspected to determine the validity of the judgment rendered therein. It is contended by appellees that under the statute (paragraph 565, Id.) the judgment-roll in a case where the complaint is not answered is constituted only of the summons, with return of service, and the complaint, with a memorandum indorsed thereon that the default of the defendant in not answering was entered, and a copy of-the judgment, and that in a collateral proceeding the validity of the judgment is to be determined by an inspection of the judgment-roll alone. This statute was apparently adopted from California, and many decisions from that state are cited to support this contention.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
209 P. 302, 24 Ariz. 311, 25 A.L.R. 1251, 1922 Ariz. LEXIS 211, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/noonan-v-montgomery-ariz-1922.