Sanford v. Sanford

28 Conn. 6
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedFebruary 15, 1859
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 28 Conn. 6 (Sanford v. Sanford) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sanford v. Sanford, 28 Conn. 6 (Colo. 1859).

Opinion

Stores, C. J.

If the record, of the judgment on which this action was brought, and which was adduced in evidence on the trial, is defective because it did not sufficiently show, either expressly or by legal presumption, that the, court rendering that judgment had jurisdiction to proceed in the case, it is at least very questionable whether such defect, could be supplied by the further evidence introduced, consisting of th.e. depositions and, agreement;. but we n,eed. not determine the. question of their admissibility, as we think that t.he record of the judgment was, of itself sufficient, without the aid of the, other evidence, to. entitle the plaintiff to recover, It. is conceded that tha.t. court was one of general jurisdiction a.n.d had cognizance of the subject matter of the action in which the judgment, was [ *13 ] rendered, and that it had acquired jurisdiction also of the person of the defendant, bv a regular service of the [11]*11process in that action,, as well as by his appearance in it after the return of the writ; and that, but for the intervention of the nonsuit which was entered in the case, that jurisdiction would have continued until the judgment, on which this action was brought, was rendered. But it appears from the record in the case, that, before that judgment was rendered, the entry of that nonsuit had been, by order of the court, erased on motion of the plaintiff, and the case- restored to its original place upon the docket. The record however, although it shows that this was done upon the motion of the plaintiff and that the court directed notice of that motion to be given to the defendant or his attorney within a prescribed time, does rio.t state that such notice was given before the nonsuit was set aside. The defendant defends the present action on the ground that that court could not, for want of jurisdiction, rightfully set aside that nonsuit and reinstate that case without actual notice to the defendant of that motion, and that the record .should show, not merely by legal presumption, but expressly, that such notice was given ; and for the want of such an express statement on that record he, insists that, as it does not sufficiently appear that the court had authority to proceed after the nonsuit was allowed, the judgment subsequently rendered in favor of the plaintiff^ and on which the present suit is brought, is null and void.

If the court had jurisdiction of the suit when it acted on the motion to erase the nonsuit, the propriety of the, manner in which that jurisdiction was exercised, in that or any of the proceedings in that case, can not be made a subject of enquiry or objection collaterally in any other case. The jurisdiction of the court must be presumed to have been properly exercised, and its judgments and decisions must stand good until they are reversed, by a proper appellant tribunal, on writ of error or other appropriate direct proceeding for that purpose. If then the court in Ohio had not become divested of its jurisdiction in, the case when it set aside the nonsuit, its action in that proceeding,, hav-ing taken place in *the exercise of such jurisdiction, [ *14 ] can not be collaterally impeached, since to. do. so would be to revise the decision of a tribunal in a matter of which it had sole cognizance, and thus to deprive it to that extent of its rightful authority. For jurisdiction of a case consists in the right to hear and determine it, and embraces, not only its merits, but the proceedings in it which are necessary to enable the court possessing such jurisdiction to bring it to a final determination,—that is, to such a determination that the court can not rightfully or legally proceed further in the. case. Ob- , viously no such end is attained so long as, the. proceedings in the [12]*12case which have taken place remain subject to the renewed or continued or further action of the court, or while it retains the right to revoke, annul, or alter in any manner its previous action. The Ohio court confessedly had, as has been stated, full jurisdiction both of the subject matter of the case before it and of the person of the defendant. It retained that jurisdiction until the case should be finally determined, and therefore during all its intermediate stages. It was not lost or exhausted when it directed the nonsuit to be entered. This is most clear and indeed is virtually conceded by the defendant who properly admits what is shown by all the common law authorities, (which it is not controverted apply to the proceedings of .that court,) that the court had the rightful authority to set aside that non-suit for what it should consider a proper reason, and in a mode which it should deem proper, so far as the course and practice of that court was concerned. Whether such reason was 'sufficient, or the manner of exercising its jurisdiction on the subject was the best, it was for that court only to decide; as every court is the sole judge of the manner of exercising its own jurisdiction, and its mode or course of proceeding is a matter of practice merely to be determined only by itself. But it is absurd to say that the granting of a nonsuit which the court has the rightful power to set aside, terminates the jurisdiction of the court in the case, for if the jurisdiction was terminated it would have no such power. Nor is its jurisdiction suspended by the nonsuit. The jurisdiction continues to exist in full j- j *force, to be exercised whenever a proper occasion shall require it. A suspension of the jurisdiction of a court, in the sense in which the term is used by the defendant, is a solecism. Jurisdiction is either exhausted or retained. It can never be properly said to be in a state where it is suspended and can be revived. The exercise of it by the court possessing it may be and often is suspended, but it still continues to exist, and only awaits the determination of the court as to when and how it shall be called into action. The question, then, whether the nonsuit was properly set aside, is not properly, as the defendant would have it considered, a question of jurisdiction as to the court in Ohio, but one as to the exercise of its jurisdiction. It respects only the ■ correctness of its decision on the merits of the enquiry whether the nonsuit should stand, and therefore of its acts while in the exercise of its undoubted jurisdiction. The statement of the question in this form carries with it its own answer. No other court can legally determine collaterally whether that court properly exercised its power in a matter which it had the sole right of determining. It is enough that, in setting aside the nonsuit [13]*13it had granted, it had in fact, as it appears on its record, reversed and annulled its previous act in a case where it had the acknowledged right to do so.

This view furnishes a complete answer to the claim that, after the nonsuit was granted, it was as necessary in order to confer power or jurisdiction on the court to set it aside, that notice should have been given to the defendant of the motion for that purpose, as it was necessary to notify him of the suit in order to enable that court to take cognizance of it in the first instance ; for, as the court originally acquired jurisdiction of the case, it retained and continued to possess it for the purpose of acting on that motion, and it was not a case of the re-acquisition of jurisdiction, if indeed there could be a case of regaining jurisdiction in a suit where it was once lost or suspended. It also shows the groundlessness of the claim that the suit was at an end by the granting of the nonsuit, for the right to set it aside proves that for that purpose the suit was still pending.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
28 Conn. 6, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sanford-v-sanford-conn-1859.