Spoors v. Coen

44 Ohio St. (N.S.) 497
CourtOhio Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 15, 1886
StatusPublished

This text of 44 Ohio St. (N.S.) 497 (Spoors v. Coen) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Spoors v. Coen, 44 Ohio St. (N.S.) 497 (Ohio 1886).

Opinion

MinshaXjL, J.

There are, as we think, two sufficient reasons for holding that, upon the case as reserved to this court, judgment should be rendered for the plaintiff. 1. The probate court is not clothed with the jurisdiction it assumed to exercise in setting aside the conveyance to Rhoda Spoors. 2. But if it were, no such jurisdiction had been invoked by the administrator in his petition as against her.

[501]*5011. The probate court had no jurisdiction, for, although it is provided in section 6189, Revised Statutes, that the petition to sell lands to pay the debts of the estate “ shall include all the deceased may have conveyed with intent to defraud creditors,” yet it is provided- in section 6140, Revised Statutes, that “ where such land is included in the application before a recovery of the possession thereof, the action shall be in the court of common pleas.”

The reason of this provision doubtless arose from a persuasion in the minds of the legislature that a recovery of such lands involved an exercise of jurisdiction that should only be conferred on the court of conlmon pleas, they being courts of general jurisdiction in matters of law and equity, and therefore more competent, from the character of' their judges, constantly employed in the exercise of such jurisdiction, to hear and determine such matters. And so, to avoid a multiplicity of suits, it is provided that an action to set dside a conveyance of lands, that had been made by a decedent to defraud creditors, may oe united with a proceeding for an order of sale to pay debts, by resorting, in the first instance, to the court of common pleas.

In this case the pleader seems to have assumed that he had avoided this objection to the jurisdiction of the court, by the averment, “ that the petitioner has been and is now in the exclusive possession of said premises.” But mere possession, however exclusive, by the administrator, does not confer jurisdiction upon the probate court to order a sale to pay debts, unless the possession had been recovered in an action against the grantee, or those claiming under him, for the purpose of having the conveyance set aside as fraudulent against creditors. Until the conveyance has been set aside by the judgment of a competent court, or a reconveyance made by the party holding the title, an order for the sale of such lands to pay the debts of the decedent can not be made in the common please or probate court. This is in harmony with what has been the settled policy of our state in the matter of judicial sales, which has always been to so offer the land as to transfer it to the pur[502]*502chaser with a good title, that an advantageous sale may be made, instead of offering it as a lawsuit for what can be obtained from those who may feel disposed to invest in litigation. Hence, possession not acquired as the fruits-of a judgment in a suit to recover the land, avails nothing, where the proceeding for an order of sale'is begun in the probate court, instead of the common pleas.

2. But, had the probate court the same jurisdiction in such matters as the common pleas, it would avail nothing in this case, for the reason that no such jurisdiction was invoked by the petition of the administrator as against Rhoda Spoors. There ife no averment in the petition that any land had been fraudulently conveyed, mediately or immediately, to her. The only averment as to her is, that she is entitled to dower in the lands, for which an order of sale is asked; and the only relief asked as to her is that her dower may be set off and assigned therein. And, in the answer filed for her by the attorney of the administrator, she simply waives an assignment of dower in the lands and elects to take the same in money.

It. is by no means intended to question or impair the principle that wlien jurisdiction has been obtained over the subject-matter of a cause, by a court competent to exercise it, its judgment, however eri’oneous, can not be questioned ixx a collateral proceeding. A judgment so rendex’ed can only be set aside or questioned in a direct proceeding instituted for that purpose. This is familiar law. Freeman on Judg., § 135.

But a judgment rendered by a coux’t of competent jurisdiction in a case brought before it, however erroneously the jurisdiction may have been exeroised, is one thing, and a judgment entered by a coux’t of like jurisdiction in a case not before it, is another and a different thing. In the one case its judgment may be erroneous, in the other it is void. To bring a cause before a court, competent to adjudicate it, it is not only necessary that the parties should be in jus vocatio, cited or summoned in the manner required by the law of procedui’e, but a ease must also be made, or stated, [503]*503affecting the party against whom relief is asked. The power to hear and determine a cause is defined to be jurisdiction. Freeman on Judg., § 118. And, to use the language of Ranney, J., in Sheldon v. Newton, 3 Ohio St. 494, “it is coram jadice whenever a case is presented that brings this power into action.” “But,” he adds, “before this power can be affirmed to exist, it must be made to appear that the law has given the tribunal capacity to entertain the complaint against the person or thing sought to be charged or affected; that such complaint has actually been preferred; and that such person or thing has been properly brought before the tribunal to answer the charge therein contained.” The italics are our own, to call attention to the clause applicable to the question in the case before us.

It is hot necessary that the statement of the claim should be so perfect in form and substance, as to be free from objection on demurrer, to confer jurisdiction upon the court to hear and determine it. Buchanan v. Roy, 2 Ohio St. 251. If the case presented invoked the jurisdiction of the court, and could have been perfected by amendment, the judgment of the court thereon could not be treated as a nullity. But, in order that a party may be permitted to amend, there must be something to amend by. Shamokin Bank v. Street, 16 Ohio St. 10. So, unless a case is presented that could be amended, there is no case upon which a judgment can be rendered; A judgment rendered where no case has been stated is as much a judgment upon a case coram non judice, whatever may be the jurisdiction of the court rendering it, as a judgment upon a case, however perfectly stated, before a court not clothed with jurisdiction to hear and determine it.

If there were a note secured by mortgage, and suit were brought upon the note for a money judgment only, it would hardly be claimed that a judgment of foreclosure would be of any validity, even as against the mortgagor. And yet the case presented in this record is not distinguishable in principle from the case just supposed.

In Strobe v. Downer, 13 Wis. 11, Downer had purchased [504]*504lands at a sale made in a foreclosure proceeding, on which Strobe, by assignment, from one "Weirner, held a prior mortgage. The bill contained an averment that Weirner had, or claimed, some interest in the property, and he was made a party, but he did not answer. The judgment in forelosure purported to bar him of all right in the premises.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
44 Ohio St. (N.S.) 497, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/spoors-v-coen-ohio-1886.