Phillips v. Tidwell

174 S.W.2d 472, 26 Tenn. App. 543
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedDecember 30, 1942
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 174 S.W.2d 472 (Phillips v. Tidwell) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Phillips v. Tidwell, 174 S.W.2d 472, 26 Tenn. App. 543 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1942).

Opinion

*546 ANDERSON, P. J.

In addition to certain other relief not necessary to mention, the chancellor passed a decree in this case awarding the complainant a recovery on a promissory note against A. W. Wilson, C. L. Wilson, H. P. Tidwell and G. E. Tidwell. Prom this decree the defendant, 0. E. Tidwell, alone, appealed. The defenses are res judicata and non est factum.

The basis of the defense of res judicata is that the defendant, Tidwell, was discharged from liability on the note by a judgment rendered by the Circuit Court of McNairy County at the May Term, 1937. The complainant contends, and the chancellor held, that this judgment was void for at the time it was rendered the plaintiff in that suit was dead, he having owned the note at the time that suit was instituted.

There is no real controversy about the facts, in so far as are concerned the questions necessary to be decided. The note involved is payable to the order of G. J. Garrison, and was due December 12, 1931. It purports to have been signed by M. L. Wilson, A. W. Wilson, C. L. Wilson, H. P. Tidwell and the defendant, G. E. Tidwell. G. J. Garrison was the owner and holder of the note at the time of his death on February 3, 1933. He was survived by his widow and an only child, the complainant in this case, Mrs. Marvin Phillips. He owed no debts at the time of his death and as a consequence there was no administration on his estate. The widow, under hex-rights as such, took the entire personal estate, including the note refexred to. On December 5', 1934, she brought suit on the note before a justice of the péace against all of the makers. A trial resulted in a judgment in her favor.' Of the defendants in that judgment, G. E. Tidwell only appealed to the circuit court, where the papers were filed January 16, 1935.

*547 Before any action was taken in tlie Circuit Court, tlie plaintiff in that suit, Mrs. G. J. Garrison, died intestate August 31, 1935, and left surviving her as her only child and distributee, her daughter, the complainant, Mrs. Marvin Phillips. Since Mrs. G. J. Garrison owed no debts, no administrator was appointed and her entire personal estate, including the note then in suit in the circuit court, passed to her daughter.

The minutes of the circuit court reflect.that on May 17, 1937, in a case styled G. J. Garrison v. M. L. Wilson et ah, a final judgment was rendered. The order recites that the case having come on to be heard on that day, “when it appearing to the court that the defendant, G. E. Tidwell is not liable on said note he is therefore discharged from liability on the same: It further appearing to the Court that from the entire record that plaintiff, G. J. Garrison is entitled to a judgment against the defendants, M. L. Wilson, A. W. Wilson, C. L. Wilson and H. F. Tidwell on said note in the sum of $540.00' principal and the further sum of $177.00 interest making a total of $677.00; it also appearing to the Court that the note sued on provides for attorneys fees and it appearing that a fee of $75.00 would be a reasonable fee in this case to J. A. Shelton, atty. for Plaintiff the same is adjudged by the court: making in all the sum of $752.00 [sic.] ”

There had been no suggestion of the death of G. J. Garrison or Mrs. G. J. Garrison, and no attempt to revive the suit in the name of any person. Mrs. Phillips, the sole distributee of Mrs. Garrison and the complainant here, had no notice of any of the proceedings in the circuit court.

We are concerned here only with the validity of the judgment in the circuit court in so far as G. E. Tidwell *548 was discharged from liability. He contends that since it affirmatively appears from the face of the record that the circuit court had jurisdiction of the parties and the subject matter and the proceeding was regular on its face, the judgment at most was voidable only, rather than void, and hence could be set aside only upon the proper averment of some equitable ground of relief, such as fraud, accident or mistake. We think this is a misconception of the law as it applies to the facts. Ignoring the misnomer due to the omission of “Mrs.” in the style of the case, as, other questions aside, might very well be done, the attempt to discharge the defendant Tidwell from liability was equivalent to a judgment against Mrs. Garrison, who was at the time dead. Such a judgment is an absolute nullity, and not merely voidable. Morrison v. Deaderick, 29 Tenn. (10 Humph.), 342; Smith v. Cunningham, 2 Tenn. Ch. 565, 571; Collins v. Knight, 3 Tenn. Ch. 183. See also, Carter et al. v. Carriger’s Adm’rs, 3 Yerg. 411, 24 Am. Dec. 585; Kelly v. Hooper’s Ex’rs, 3 Yerg. 395.

With respect to such a judgment, the facts essential to show it invalid may be proven in any proceeding directly attacking it, and this is true even though such facts are de hors the record. See Morrison v. Deaderick, supra. In the instant case the amended bill makes such an attack, and under the undisputed evidence it is well made.

There is nothing in the case of Outlaw v. Cherry, 88 Tenn. 367, 12 S. W. 725, to conflict with the view we have expressed. There it was insisted that a judgment previously rendered by the Supreme Court was void because the defendant was dead at that time. In response to this contention, it was said, “the judgment is not void on its face, and can only be made to appear so by evi *549 dence outside the record, which we, having no original jurisdiction, are unauthorized to take.” It was not held that a court having such jurisdiction could not take such evidence and, upon proper pleading, decree accordingly. Nor do we discover anything in New York Cas. Co. v. Lawson, 160 Tenn. 329, 336, 24 S. W. (2d) 881, that helps the defendant.

In Kelly v. Hooper’s Executors, supra, the action was one of debt brought upon the record of a decree pronounced in a chancery court of Mississippi. The executors plead that the decree upon which the action was founded was pronounced more than two years after the death of the defendant. In holding that this decree was properly sustained, the court said: “For this cause the decree is void, and no action can be supported upon it. Any fact which will show the court had no jurisdiction, and that the judgment is consequently void, may be pleaded. We could not when called upon to enforce this decree, in the present action, refuse to look into the record to see whether the court had jurisdiction, whether thé fact by which the want of jurisdiction appear on the face of the proceedings, or be shown by plea of the defendant.” See, also, Earthman’s Administrators v. Jones, 2 Yerg. 484.

The defendant next contends that the evidence did not warrant the conclusion reached by the chancellor that the complainant had discharged the burden cast upon her by the general plea of non est factum. In opposition, the complainant first insists that the plea was insufficient in form and in substance.

In his answer to the amended bill, the defendant averred that he had not been able to see the note sued on “in the original J. P. case since it got into the Circuit Court, but *550

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Bluebook (online)
174 S.W.2d 472, 26 Tenn. App. 543, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/phillips-v-tidwell-tennctapp-1942.