Trimble v. Longworth

13 Ohio St. 431, 13 Ohio St. (N.S.) 431
CourtOhio Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 15, 1862
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 13 Ohio St. 431 (Trimble v. Longworth) 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
Trimble v. Longworth, 13 Ohio St. 431, 13 Ohio St. (N.S.) 431 (Ohio 1862).

Opinion

Peck, J.

Several grounds for the reversal of the decree in this case have been suggested, but we deem it necessary to notice those only which relate to an alleged want of jurisdiction in the court pronouncing it, over the persons of the defendants ; and the rendition of such decree against minors, without the appointment of, and an answer by, a guardian ad litem in their behalf.

1. As to jurisdiction over the persons of defendants.

The original bill was filed in the Hamilton common pleas, June 30, 1835, against the heirs of Timothy Trimble, deceased, one Isabella Hill, being then a minor, though not so de-cribed in the bill, and five others, being under coverture, to correct an alleged mistake in, and compel specific execution of, a contract for the sale of real estate, situate in that county, and descended to them and their co-defendants. The heirs being all nonresidents of the state, were not subject to the process of our courts, and the statute then in force, the 12th section of the “ act directing the mode of proceeding in chancery,” passed January 22, 1824 (2 Chase, 1279), [437]*437provided that, in such cases, suit might be prosecuted “ in any county where the land lies, and the court should direct the manner of giving notice to the absent defendants.”

The bill sets forth the names and residence of all the heirs, some residing in the State of Pennsylvania, others in New Jersey, and others still in New York; and the court thereupon “ ordered, that notice of the pendency, objects and prayer of said bill, should be given to them by publication weekly in some newspaper published, and of general circulation in said county, and a copy of the paper containing the notice, to be directed to the place of residence of the defendants, if known.”

The only proof on file, as to a compliance with this order of the court, is first, an affidavit by one of the proprietors of the Cincinnati Gazette, of the due publication, in that paper, of the notice required by the first branch of said order; and secondly, the following affidavit of A. N. Riddle, Esq., solicitor of complainant:

“ State oe Ohio, Hamilton County, ss.
“ Adam N. Riddle, being duly sworn, deposeth and saith, that the Cincinnati Gazette, the same paper in which the above notice was inserted, was, by said deponent, transmitted by mail to Nathaniel P. Hill and others, defendants in said case, to Montgomery, Orange county, New York, on the 11th July, A.D. 1835; further, deponant saith not.
A. N. Riddle.”
“ Sworn to, and subscribed, before me, v this 7th day of October, 1835. V JOHN BüRGOYNE, A. J.” )

If this affidavit discloses all that was done toward notifying the defendants, under the last clause of said order, it was clearly insufficient as to all of thém except Nathaniel P. Hill, who is charged in the bill with having, qnder claim of authority from his co-heirs, sold his and their inheritance, and received the consideration therefor, but had, by mistake, failed to convey their interests therein. This affidavit proves merely [438]*438that a single copy of the paper containing the notice was forwarded to Montgomery, Orange county, N. Y., directed to “ Nathaniel P. Hill and others,” and was not accompanied by any proof that the precise residence of the other heirs in the states of Pennsylvania, New Jersey and New York was unknown. The liability asserted — their obligation to convey — was, as will be seen hereafter, severable. Performance might be decreed as to one or more, and refused as to others. A notice, therefore, sent only to one who hid confessedly granted away all his interest in the land, and was charged with having sold the interest of others, and received the money, is not, we apprehend, a substantial compliance with the order of the court, unless it appeared that the residence of the others was unknown. He might'communicate the information to them,, it is true; and he might also he interested to suppress it.

It is an elementary principle that no man’s rights should be adjudged until he has had his day in court, and an opportunity to be heard. The statute, however, in cases like the one at bar, from a supposed necessity, has sanctioned an adjudication of one’s rights, without actual notice to him that those rights are in process of litigation ; but in all such cases, .it must be shown that the statutory substitute for personal service, has been substantially complied with. This does not appear to have been done in the present instance. The publication and the sending copies to the heirs unitedly, formed the process by which they were to be brought into court, and are a part of the complete record. It is a ease in which the decree was directly impeached, and not one in which its validity is drawn in question collaterally. Jurisdiction must, therefore, appear, and is not to be presumed, from its exercise.

But, it is said that the sufficiency of the service is res ad-iudicata, and can not now be questioned by the complainants in review, the court below having recited, in its decree, that the cause was heard upon bill, exhibits and testimony, and “ that notice had been given by publication in due form of law.” Aside from the fact, that such form is usually adopted by the solicitor without consulting the court, it is, perhaps, [439]*439sufficient to say that such ex parte finding, where the record otherwise shows neither appearance nor service of process, can not estop a party from denying the fact of jurisdiction, in a bill of review seeking to set the decree aside for such cause. If this were not so, it would always be within the power of the court, or its amanuensis, to exclude all inquiry into its jurisdiction, by expressly finding such jurisdiction to exist, and then presenting such finding as an estoppel to further inquiry.

The distinction between cases where the validity of the record of a court of general jurisdiction is drawn in question collaterally, and those in which such record is directly im peached by writ of error or bill of review, is broad and well defined. In the one case, jurisdiction is presumed prima facie, unless the record disproves it, while in the other, if it is denied, its existence must be proved by the record itself. The validity of the record now before us was considered in the. case of Lessee of Fowler v. Whiteman (2 Ohio St. Rep. 270), and it was held by a majority of the court that the finding of the court, “ that publication had been made according to law,” was conclusive in a collateral action, but it is distinctly admitted, on page 286, that such finding might be impeached upon review or rehearing.

The publication in the paper, and sending copies to the. defendants, was the process for bringing the defendants into court, and forms part of the record. We are not at liberty, in this proceeding, to presume, in favor of the jurisdiction and finding of the court, that there was also proof that copies were sent to the other defendants. The affidavit professes to- embrace all within its terms, “ to Nath. J. P. Hill and others, defendants in said case,” and is, therefore, analogous to the case of Moore v. Starks (2 Ohio St. Rep. 869), in which a.subpena for minor heirs had been returned “not subpenaed, and in which the court refused to presume, even in a collateral action,”

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Bluebook (online)
13 Ohio St. 431, 13 Ohio St. (N.S.) 431, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/trimble-v-longworth-ohio-1862.