Stigers v. Brent

50 Md. 214, 1879 Md. LEXIS 1
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJanuary 24, 1879
StatusPublished
Cited by27 cases

This text of 50 Md. 214 (Stigers v. Brent) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Stigers v. Brent, 50 Md. 214, 1879 Md. LEXIS 1 (Md. 1879).

Opinion

Brent, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The bill in this case is filed by the appellants, as creditors of a certain John J. Brosius, to set aside a judgment rendered against him in favor of the appellee, George Brent, on the 12th day of February, 1877, by the Circuit Court for Washington County.

The cause of action was two promissory notes given by John J. Brosius to the appellee for money loaned, the one, dated July 1st, 1874, being for $2000, payable two years after date, and the other, dated November 1st, 1874, being for $1000, payable twenty months after date. Shortly after the maturity of both notes, suit was brought upon them to the November term, 1876, of the Circuit Court for Washington County, and judgment obtained at the following term, which commenced in February, 1877.

On the 23rd of the same month of February, and eleven days after the rendition of this judgment, Clarence Brosius filed a petition on the equity side of the Court for a writ de lunático inquirendo against the said John J. Brosius. The writ was issued, and an inquisition taken under it and returned on the 10th of March following, the jury finding that Brosius was then a lunatic, without lucid intervals, and had been so since the 1st of August, 1875.

A large amount of testimony has been taken in the case, and the soundness of Brosius’ mind at the times he borrowed the two sums of money mentioned from the appellee and executed these notes, has not been questioned or doubted. The good faith and fairness of this transaction is conceded on all sides.

Nor can it be questioned that he afterwards became of unsound mind, and was so at the time the suit of the [220]*220appellee was brought, and the judgment in question obtained. The proof establishes these facts very conclusively.

The bill does not charge any actual fraud, collusion or conspiracy, but alleges that the judgment was improperly obtained, and unless it is declared void by the Court in the exercise of its equity powers, the appellee will have a preference in the distribution of the estate of Brosius, and a fraud in law will thereby be committed upon the rights of the complainants as creditors.

Three objections have been urged against the validity of this judgment. The first, that a judgment cannot be rendered against a lunatic. The second, that no summons was served, and the third, that the attorneys who appeared in the case and confessed the judgment, had no sufficient authoritj'- to do so.

In this case no question arises upon the fairness or validity of the notes, which are the foundation of the judgment. Their consideration was for money loaned, and they were signed and delivered by Brosius, a considerable time before his mind became impaired from business troubles and lunacy supervened. The naked point is presented whether a lunatic can be sued at law for a debt which he contracted when of sound mind, and a judgment therefor obtained against him.

Upon this point all the authorities agree, unless where some statute intervenes to prohibit it. In this State no such statute exists.

In the case of Tomlinson’s Lessee vs. Devore, 1 G., 345, this question seems to have been for the first time presented for the decision of this Court. It was there contended that a Court of law had no jurisdiction to render a judgment against a lunatic, and that the exclusive control over his person and property had been given to the Court of Chancery by the Act of 1785, ch. 12, now embodied in the Code, Art. 16, under the sub-title “Non [221]*221compos mentis.” The case of Brasher vs. Cortland, 2 John. Ch. Cas., 403, was relied upon as authority, hut the Court in its opinion shows that the decision of Chancellor Kent in that case was made under the peculiar provisions of a statute of New York, which were not to be found embodied in our Act of 1785. They sustain the jurisdiction of a Court of law, and held that the judgment against the lunatic was valid, and that a sale, under an execution issued upon it, passed a good title to the purchaser. Upon the validity of such a judgment,’ where not prohibited by some statute, they say on page 347 (1 G.,) “the authoritids, both in this country and England, are conclusive.”

Among the English cases we will refer only to the case of Bagster and others vs. Earl of Portsmouth. 7 Dow. & Ry., 614. This was an action of assumpsit against a lunatic, and although the main question in the case was, whether a lunatic could contract for necessaries and whether the items charged in the account, which was the cause of action, could be considered as necessaries, yet the validity of the judgment was at issue, and it was upheld by the Court of King’s Bench, all the Judges concurring.

The text books are also agreed upon the point. In Freeman on Judgments, page 123, sec. 152, it is said, “while an occasional difference of opinion manifests itself in regard to the propriety and possibility of binding femmes covert and infants by judicial proceedings, in which they were not represented by some competent authority, no such difference has been made apparent in relation to a more unfortunate and more defenceless class of persons; but by a concurrence of judicial authority, lunatics are held to be within the jurisdiction of the Courts. Judgments against them, it is said, are neither void nor voidable, they cannot he reversed for error on account of defendant’s lunacy. * * * In a suit against a lunatic, the judgment is properly entered against him, [222]*222and not against his guardian.” See also, Shelford on Lunatics, pages (m) 407 and 429, and 3 Robinson’s Practice, p. 240, par. 3, and English authorities there cited.

It is to be said of the case of Eclzstein’s Estate, Select Equity Cases by Parsons, p. 59, which was so strongly relied upon and urged on the part of the appellants, as was said hy this Court, in 1 Gill, of Brasher vs. Cortland, It was decided upon the construction given hy the Court to the particular statute of Pennsylvania, which is very similar in its provisions to the statute of New York, under which the decision of Chancellor Kent was made in the case above referred to. It is clearly inapplicable, and we cannot accept the decision or the reasoning of the Court as an authority to govern the case before us.

We have no difficulty in reaching the conclusion, upon the objection of lunacy, that it is no sufficient ground for declaring this judgment a nullity. The jurisdiction of a Court of law to render judgment against a lunatic defendant, is too well settled to be now questioned, and particularly in this State, since the decision of Tomlinson’s Lessee vs. Devore.

But it is claimed that there was no service hy the sheriff of the “ summons.” The proof in the case does not sustain this objection. The writ is returned by the sheriff “summoned,” and that endorsement upon it remains unchanged. The familiar rule of law is, “ that credence is to he given to the return of the sheriff; so much so that there can be no averment against the return in the same action.” Watson on Sheriffs, p. (m.) 72. There appears to have been no step taken to have this return amended, if false, nor has the sheriff been examined as a witness to prove there was error in it.

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Bluebook (online)
50 Md. 214, 1879 Md. LEXIS 1, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stigers-v-brent-md-1879.