Renaud v. Abbott

116 U.S. 277, 6 S. Ct. 1194, 29 L. Ed. 629, 1886 U.S. LEXIS 1762
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedJanuary 4, 1886
Docket23
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 116 U.S. 277 (Renaud v. Abbott) 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
Renaud v. Abbott, 116 U.S. 277, 6 S. Ct. 1194, 29 L. Ed. 629, 1886 U.S. LEXIS 1762 (1886).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Matthews

delivered the opinion of the court.

The writ of error in this case was sued out and allowed by the Chief Justice of the Supreme Court of New Hampshire, on June 13, 1882, returnable to October Term, 1882, of this court. The transcript of the record was filed here July 14, 1882, and the defendant in error entered his appearance, through counsel, on July 28, 1882, which, though special in terms, was not limited to any particular purpose.

*281 At October Term, 1883, a motion was filed to dismiss the cause on two grounds1,-because the .citation had been served on the defendant in error in Massachusetts by the marshal of that district; and, 2, because the present plaintiff in error,had been improperly substituted as successor to the plaintiff in the judgment sought to be reviewed. This motion to dismiss, although submitted to the court at that term, was postponed until the hearing on the merits. So far as the first ground is involved it comes too late. The alleged irregularity in the ser- • vice of the citation could, at any rate, only have been taken advantage of by a motion to dismiss, made promptly ,on an appearance limited to that special purpose, and was cured by such an appearance as was entered in this case. United States v. Yates, 6 How. 606, 608; Buckingham v. McLean, 13 How. 150.

The judgment sought to be reviewed was rendered in favor of the defendant, in a suit brought by Isaac L. Wilbur upon a judgment rendered in his favor, as syndic of his creditors under the laws of Louisiana, in the Fifth District Court of New Orleans, in that State. Wilbur having died in July, 1881, after the judgment against him in the Supreme Court of New Hampshire, William H. Henaud thereupon, on June 12, 1882, on his petition, showing that he had been appointed under the laws of Louisiana to succeed Wilbur as syndic of his creditors, was substituted as plaintiff in the judgment, and allowed to prosecute a writ of error to this court. It was the province of the Supreme Court of New Hampshire to permit this substitution, and its action in doing so is not open to objection by the defendant in error in this court. We receive the transcript of the record in the cause as it is certified to us by that court, in answer to the precept of the writ of error allowed and issued to that end. When brought here it is open to examination only for the purpose of deciding whether it contains a Federal question within our jurisdiction, and .if so, whether there is , error in the decision of that question by the Supreme Court of the State. Whether the present plaintiff in error ought to have been substituted for the deceased plaintiff in the judgment to be reviewed was a question of practice under the laws *282 of New Hampshire, which the Supreme Court of that State had. the exclusive right to determine. It is not open to any inquiry on our part under the present writ.

The action was in debt brought by Wilbur upon a judgment alleged to have .been recovered by him in the Fifth District Court of the City of New Orleans, in the State of Louisiana, against Joseph S. Abbott, then in full life, and one Edward A, Abbott, for the sum of $23,383.69, with interest thereon from November 1,1862, as damages in a certain cause then pending in said court between the said plaintiff and the said Joseph S. Abbott and Edward A. Abbott, as copartners under the name of J. S. & E. A. Abbott, and for costs of suit. . Edward A. Abbott, as administrator-of Joseph S. Abbott, alone was sued. The plea was nul Uel record.

The plaintiff offered in evidence á duly certified transcript of the record of the judgment sued on. From that it appeared that the citation and copy of the petition were returned by the sheriff, served on J. S. Abbott, one of the defendants, personally, on December 28, 1866. No service on the other defendant appears to have been made. Judgment was afterwards entered therein as follows :

"I. L. Wilbur, Syndic, &c., vs. J. L. & E. A. Abbott. No.
“ On motion of E. C. Mix, of counsel for plaintiff, and on introducing due proof of the claim of said plaintiff—
“ It is ordered and adjudged that the default herein entered •on the eleventh of January, 1867, be now confirmed and made final, and that plaintiff, I. L. Wilbur, in his capacity as syndic of his creditors and of the creditors of Wilbur and Borge, recover of the defendants, Joseph S. and .Edward" A. Abbott, who reside in Concord, in the State of New Hampshire, are commercial partners there doing business under the style and firm of J. S. & E. A. Abbott, in solido, the sum of twenty-three thousand three hundred and eighty-three TVT dollars, with legal interest from the first of November, 1862, until paid, and costs of suit.
*283 “Judgment rendered 19th January, 1867. Signed 24th January, 1867.
(Signed) Chas. Beaumont, Judge."

The defendant objected'to this transcript as evidence on the ground that the record disclosed a judgment that was void, because it was a joint judgment against two with service [of] process upon one only.

But the plaintiff supplemented the.proof by offering in. evidence the transcript of another judgment rendered in the same court, in a proceeding numbered 17,608, in which Joseph S. Abbott and Edward A. Abbott were plaintiffs and the said Isaac L. Wilbur was defendant, being a suit in which the plaintiffs sought to obtain a decree of nullity of the judgment against them in the former action numbered 16,987.

The petition in this suit of nullity set forth the judgment it sought to annul, recited the proceedings in which it was rendered, and averred “ that no service of a copy of the petition or citation in said suit was ever made on them, either individually or collectively, personally or otherwise,” and “ that the return of the sheriff that personal service of a copy of the petition and citation was made on J. 8. Abbott, one of your petitioners-and defendant in said suit, is not true.” The prayer was that, for this reason, the said judgment be declared to be absolutely null and void and of no effect.

To this petition Wilbur, the defendant-therein, answered.as follows:

“ Now comes the defendant, I. L. Wilbur, syndic, &c., of his creditors and the creditors of Wilbur & Oo., Wilbur & Arnot, and Wilbur ■ & Borge, and for answer to the petition of the plaintiffs denies all and singular the allegations therein contained, and avers that the judgment in suit No. 16,987 on the docket of this court, sought to be annulled, is a valid judgment rendered on citation of proper parties, and cannot be impeached.
“This respondent further pleads that the plaintiffs have .judicially admitted that they were properly cited in said suit No. 16,987, and are estopped to deny citation in said suit for *284

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
116 U.S. 277, 6 S. Ct. 1194, 29 L. Ed. 629, 1886 U.S. LEXIS 1762, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/renaud-v-abbott-scotus-1886.