Pennington v. Gibson

57 U.S. 65, 14 L. Ed. 847, 16 How. 65, 1850 U.S. LEXIS 1537
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedMarch 18, 1854
StatusPublished
Cited by58 cases

This text of 57 U.S. 65 (Pennington v. Gibson) 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
Pennington v. Gibson, 57 U.S. 65, 14 L. Ed. 847, 16 How. 65, 1850 U.S. LEXIS 1537 (1854).

Opinion

Mr. Justice DANIEL

delivered the opinion of the court.

The defendant in error, a citizen of the State of New York, instituted in the Circuit Court an action of debt against the plaintiff in error, a citizen of the State of Maryland, to-recover the amount of a decree, with the costs thereon, which had been rendered in favor of the defendant against the plaintiff in error by the Supreme Court in equity in the State of New York. The averments in the declaration are as follow: That at a general term of the Supreme Court in Equity of the State of New York, one of the United States of America, held at the court house in the village of Cooperstown, in the county of Otsego,, in the State of New York, on the first Monday in November in the year 1848, present William H. Shankland (and others) Justices, it was ordered, adjudged and decreed, by the said court, in a certain suit therein pending, wherein the said Lyman Gibson was complainant, and the said Josias Pennington (and others) were defendants, that the said Lyman Gibson recover against the said Josias Pennington, and that the said'Josias -Pennington pay to the said Lyman Gibson, the amount of the consideration money paid by the said Lyman Gibson to a certain Samuel Boyer, as agent and attorney of the said Josias Pennington, as should appear by the several indorsements upon the contract mentioned and set forth in the bill of complaint, and ■ produced and proved as an exhibit in said suit, with interest on the sever tal payments and indorsements respectively, amounting in the aggregate on the 25th day of November, 1848, to the sum of 00,473.18, • and also that the said Josias Pennington pay to *75 the said complainant his costs in said suit, which were taxed at the sum of $661.68, as by the said decree duly signed and enrolled at a special term of the Supreme Court in equity' aforesaid, held on the 30th day of April in the year 1849, at the village of Bath, in the county of Steuben, in the State of New York, and now remaining in the office of the Clerk of Steuben county aforesaid, will on reference appear.

To the declaration as above stated, the defendant, the now plaintiff in error, demurred';- and upon a joinder in demurrer, the court overruled the demurrer .of the said defendant, and gave judgment for the plaintiff, the how defendant in error, for -the debt and costs in the declaration .set forth, together with costs of suit.

The defendant in the Circuit Court assigned for causes pf demurrer the three following:'

' 1. For that it appears from the said declaration that the cause of action in this case is an alleged decree of an ¿lleged court of equity, as set forth in the said declaration, whereas'an action at law cannot be maintained in this court; on such a decree; at least without an averment in pleading that said decree within the limits of its territorial jurisdiction is of equal efficacy with a judgment at law.

2. For even if an action at law can be maintained for the recovery of the sums of money directed by such alleged decree to be paid, as stated in said declaration, yet the form of action adopted in this case is not the proper form of action for the enforcement- of such a recovery.

3. For that it does not appear in and by the said declaration, nor-is it averred in any manner, that the said alleged court of equity had any jurisdiction to pass a decree against this defendant for payment to the plaintiff of any of the sums of money in the said declaration mentioned. •

In considering these causes of demurrer, the attention is necessarily directed to- the ambiguous terms assumed in the first assignment, by propounding a proposition general or universal in its character, ■ and afterwards conceding a modification or change in,that proposition inconsistent not merely with its scope find extent, but with its essential force and operation. . For instance, it is first stated that “ the cause of action is an alleged decree of an alleged court of equity, whereas an action at law cannot-be maintained in this court on such a decree.” We can interpret this proposition to have no other intelligible meaning than this, and to be comprehended in no sense more restricted than this, namely, that an action at law cannot be maintained in a court of law when -the cause of .action shall be a decree of the court of equity. In other words, that the character of the foun *76 dation, or cause of action, namely, its being a decree of a court of equity, must, in every such instance, deprive the court of law of cognizance of the cause. The proposition, thus generally put, is then followed by a qualification in these words, “at least without an averment in pleading, that the decree within its territorial jurisdiction is of equal efficacy with a judgment at law.” Ey this language the universality of the previous proposition is modified, or rather contradicted, for it contains an obvious concession, that provided a particular efficiency can be affirmed with regard to it, an action at law may be maintained even upon a decree of a court of equity.

We will first examine the correctness of the general position, that an action at law cannot be maintained upon a decree in equity; and will, in the next place, inquire how far the jurisdic- ’ tion of the court pronouncing this decree, and the efficiency of its proceedings with reference to the parties before it, may be inferred or rightfully taken notice of, from its style or character, or from proper' judicial knowledge'of the subject-matter of its cognizance, independently of a particular special averment.

We are aware that at one period courts bf equity were said not to be courts of record, and their decrees were not allowed to rank with judgments at law; with respect to conflicting claims of creditors, or in the administration of estates; but these opinions, the fruits of jealousy in the old common lawyers, would now hardly be seriously urged, and much less seriously admitted, after a practice so long and so well settled, as that which confers on courts of equity in cases of difficulty' and intricacy in the administration of estates, the power of marshalling assets, and in the exercise of that power the right of- controlling the order in which creditors, either legal or equitable, shall be rankéd in the prosecution of their claims. The relative dignity of courts of equity, and the binding effect of their decrees, when given within the pale of their regular constitution and jurisdiction, are no longer subjects for doubt or .question.

We hold no doctrine to be better settled than this, that whenever the parties to a.suit and the subject in controversy between them are, within the regular jurisdiction of a court of equity, the decree of that court solemnly and finally pronounced, is to every intent as binding as would be the judgment of a court of law, upon parties and their interests regularly within its cognizance. It would follow, therefore, that wherever the latter, received with, regard to its dignity'and conclusiveness as a record, would constitute the foundation for proceedings to enforce it, the former must be held as of equal authority. These are conclusions which reason and justice and consistency sustain, and an investigation will show them to be supported by express adjudica *77 tion.

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Bluebook (online)
57 U.S. 65, 14 L. Ed. 847, 16 How. 65, 1850 U.S. LEXIS 1537, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pennington-v-gibson-scotus-1854.