Stewart v. Senter

106 S.E. 443, 88 W. Va. 124, 1921 W. Va. LEXIS 59
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 8, 1921
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 106 S.E. 443 (Stewart v. Senter) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Stewart v. Senter, 106 S.E. 443, 88 W. Va. 124, 1921 W. Va. LEXIS 59 (W. Va. 1921).

Opinion

Lively, Judge :

This appeal brings up for review a decree of the Circuit Court of Wyoming County entered the 22nd day of August, 1919, which sustained a demurrer to and dismissed the plaintiff’s bill.

A. M. Stewart died testate in 1910 and shortly afterwards his son, B. Harry E. Stewart, qualified as his executor with E. M. Senter, J. M. Glenn and G. P. Stewart as sureties on his bond. Afterwards, in 1913, B. Harry E. Stewart died without having settled his accounts as executor of his father’s estate, and J. M. Glenn was appointed administrator de bonis non of A. M. Stewart’s estate and administrator of B. Harry E. Stewart’s estate. Mary Stewart, the plaintiff, was a daughter and one of the heirs and distributees of A. M. Stewart. She filed her declaration in the Circuit Court of Wyoming County at April rules, 1918, against J. M. Glenn as administrator of B. Harry E. Stewart, E. M. Senter, J. M. Glenn in his own right and George P. Stewart, alleging the death of A. M. Stewart, the appointment of B. Harry E. Stewart as his executor with the other defendants as sureties, the subsequent death of B. Harry E. .Stewart and the appointment and qualification of J. M. Glenn as administrator de bonis non of A. M. Stewart. The declaration does not specifically aver that J. M. Glenn was appointed as ad[126]*126ministrator of B. Harry E. Stewart, but it does so inferentially. A devastavit was charged with consequential damages to the plaintiff of $1000.00. On August 21, 1918, a default judgment was entered against the defendants for $550.-97 and costs, and afterwards on December 31, 1918, an abstract of the judgment was recorded in the judgment lien docket. An execution was issued and returned nullw bona on October 7, 1918. This suit in equity was instituted and .the bill filed at January rules, 1918, against the defendants, J. M. Glenn, E. M. Senter, George P. Stewart and Georgia Glenn, for the purpose of enforcing this judgment against certain real estate owned by E. M. Senter and J. M. Glenn. Each of the defendants, with the exception of J. M. Glenn, demurred .to and answered the bill. They admit the rendition of the judgment, (which they charge is invalid), and the issuance and return of the execution. They ask for affirmative relief and charge that the judgment sought to be enforced by the bill is null and void for reasons hereinafter mentioned, and pray for an injunction against the plaintiff to prevent her from proceeding further in the collection of her purported judgment. To these answers the plaintiff demurred and filed a special replication. Afterwards an amended bill was filed, making J. M. Glenn, as administrator of the estate of B. Harry E. Stewart, a party. On August 22, 1919, the court heard the cause upon the bill and exhibits, separate answers in the nature of a cross-bill, the demurrers to the bill and the demurrer -and replication to the answers, and came to the conclusion that the demurrer to the bill should be sustained, and dismissed the plaintiff’s bill, giving as a reason therefor that the judgment sought to be enforced did not in the body of the order contain the names of the defendants.

The appellant insists that the circuit court erred in so holding, and that her judgment is not void for uncertainty. The judgment is as follows:

[127]*127“THE STATE OF WEST VIRGINIA, which dues lor the use and benefit of
Mary Stewart,
v. ) IN DEBT. ORDER.
J. M. Glenn, as Administrator of B. Harry E.. Stewart, deceased, E. M. Senter, J. M. Glenn, in his own right, and George P. Stewart.
“This day came the plaintiff by its attorney, and the defendants, who were duly summoned, being thrice solemnly called, came not; it is, therefore, considered by the Court that the judgment entered in the Clerk’s office of this Court against the said defendants, stand confirmed. No jury being required by the plaintiff, the Court proceeded, in lieu thereof,. to ascertain the amount that the plaintiff is entitled to recover against the defendants in this action, and having heard and considered the evidence, doth consider that the plaintiff recover, for the use and benefit of the said Mary Stewart, against the defendant, the sum of $550.97 damages, aggregate amount of principal and interest to this date, with interest on said sum until paid, and its costs by it in its suit in this behalf expended, including $10.00 attorney’s fee.”

There is nothing uncertain about this judgment except the uncertainty suggested by the lower court to the effect that it did not contain the names of the. defendants. This was not necessary. It is perhaps better form to name the persons against whom .the judgment is rendered, in the order or decree ; however, other parts of the record may be inspected for the- purpose of relieving a judgment of any real or apparent obscurity. Clay v. Hildebrand, 34 Kan. 694; Fowler v. Doyle, 16 Iowa 534; Fleenor v. Driskill, 97 Ind. 27; Walker’s Ex. v. Page, 21 Gratt. 636; Black on Judgments (2nd Ed.) sec. 123. Numerous authorities hold that a judgment against the “defendant”, will be sufficient if the names of the defendants can be ascertained without ambiguity from other parts of the record. Black on Judgments (2nd Ed.) sec. 116, and authorities there cited. It is well settled that a judgment against the “defendant” is not defective for un[128]*128certainty where the record discloses that it is in fact a judgment against two defendants. Roach v. Blakely, 89 Va. 867. These decisions are based on reason and sound policy. All of the parties defendant are named in the caption of the judgment order, and the “defendants” were solemnly called, arid came not, and the office judgment was confirmed. The court, in lieu of a jury, ascertained the amount the plaintiff was entitled to recover from the “defendants”, and then the recovery is made against the “defendant”. It is apparent from the face of the order that the omission of the letter “s” from the word “defendant” is a clerical error. It is not necessary to look to the other parts of the record to ascertain against whom this judgment was rendered. But if we look to the summons, the declaration and the execution no doubt can remain. “Where a judgment gives the style of the cause, at its head, with sufficient definiteness to show without doubt that the plaintiffs and defendants referred to therein as such are the same individuals that are named and designated as-such in the declaration, and throughout the proceedings composing the record in the cause, such judgment is not void for vagueness or indefiniteness if it fails, in its body, to give the names of the plaintiffs and defendants for and against whom it is rendered.” 15 R. C. L. p. 597.

Defendants assert that the judgment is null and void; (1) because the declaration does not show that any specific sum of money went into the hands of B. Harry E. Stewart as executor of A. M. Stewart: (2) because plaintiff did not recover a judgment against J. M. Glenn as administrator of B. Harry E. Stewart before instituting the suit against defendants; (3) because on the trial no evidence was offered showing a devastavit of the estate of A. M. Stewart by his executor B. Harry E. Stewart. These are all defenses to the action which resulted in the judgment. They come too late after judgment. We cannot open that law proceeding now to hear matters, which, had they been interposed, would possibly have prevented the judgment from being rendered.

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Bluebook (online)
106 S.E. 443, 88 W. Va. 124, 1921 W. Va. LEXIS 59, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stewart-v-senter-wva-1921.