Tustin v. Gaunt

4 Or. 305
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 15, 1873
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 4 Or. 305 (Tustin v. Gaunt) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Tustin v. Gaunt, 4 Or. 305 (Or. 1873).

Opinion

By the Court,

Prim:, J.:

This was' an action of ejectment in the Circuit Court of Yamhill County to recover the one-eightli of one hundred and ninety acres of land situate in the county of Yamhill, State of Oregon. Caleb S. Tustin, the appellant, claims title as one of the heirs of his father, Charles S. Tustin, who died intestate in said county in the fall of 1862, seized of the land in question, leaving a widow and seven other children besides appellant.'

Respondent claims title to the land under a sale made by the administrator of the estate by said Tustin, deceased, in pursuance of certain probate proceedings and orders liad and made in the County Court of Yambill County. The title of respondent depends upon the validity of those proceedings and orders of the County Court and the sale made in pursuance thereof, as it appears that appellant was entitled to the interest in question as one of the heirs of his father, unless he has been divested of the title by this sale.

Respondent, to prove title in himself, offered in evidence the record containing the order of the County Court of Yamhill County, appointing David Smith administrator of the estate of the said Tustin, deceased; and also the proceedings and orders of said Court pertaining to the sale of the land belonging to said estate, including the land in question. Appellant objected to the admission of these [307]*307proceedings, orders and sale made in pursuance thereof, as incompetent evidence to prove title in respondent, upon the ground that the Court had no jurisdiction of either the subject-matter or of the parties interested in said estate at the time they were made, as he claims, and that, therefore, they are absolute nullities. He contends -that the County Courts of this State, in exercising judicial powers in probate matters, should be regarded as Courts of inferior and limited jurisdiction, and that none of these orders and proceedings should have been admitted in evidence without first proving all the necessary facts authorizing such Courts in making such orders. Respondent, however, contends that they are Courts of record under the Constitution, with original and exclusive jurisdiction in all probate matters, and in exercising judicial powers.in those matters should be regarded as Courts of superior jurisdiction, and that all their proceedings, orders and judgments are entitled to all the presumptions of law pertaining to such Courts.

This presents the main question to be decided in this case, that is, whether these Courts, in exercising judicial powers in probate proceedings, should be treated as Courts of inferior or as Courts of superior jurisdiction.

This is the first time in the judicial history of this State that this Court has been called upon to decide this question. "We are aware that it has already been held by this Court in several cases heretofore decided and reported that “the County Court or Board, of County Commissioners, so far as it exercises judicial powers, is a Court of special and limited jurisdiction,” and, as a logical sequence, that the facts necessary to confer jurisdiction should appear upon the face of its record or its proceedings, whenever brought in question collaterally, are mere nullities. (Thompson v. Multnomah County, 2 Ogn. 37; State of Oregon v. Officer, ante, p. 180; Johns v. Marion County, ante, p. 46.)

It appears, however, that these were all cases in which the County Court was engaged as a Board of County Commissioners, in the laying out of county roads, which was purely county business as contradistinguished from probate [308]*308business; consequently we are led to the conclusion that the Court, in the use of the language above referred to, only intended to be understood as holding that these Courts were Courts of inferior and limited jurisdiction, when exercising judicial powers in the particular class of cases then under consideration.

Section 1 of Article .YII of the Constitution provides, “That the judicial power of the State shall be vested in a Supreme Court, Circuit Courts and County Courts, which shall be Courts of record, having general jurisdiction, to be defined, limited and regulated by law in accordance with this Constitution.

“Justices of the Peace may also be invested with limited judicial powers.”

Section 12 provides that “the County Court shall have the jurisdiction pertaining to Probate Courts and Boards of County Commissioners,” etc.

Section 869 of the statute provides that “the County Court has the exclusive jurisdiction in the first instance pertaining to a Court of Probate,” among which is enumerated the power “to grant and revoke letters of administration,” and “to order the sale and disposal of real and personal property of deceased persons.”

It will be seen that the same language is used in the Constitution in reference to the Supreme and Circuit Courts that is used in regard to County Courts, as to their being “ Courts of record having general jurisdiction, to be defined, limited and regulated by law.”

As the Constitution of the State provides that County Courts shall be Courts of record having general jurisdiction, to be defined and limited by law, and the law having fixed the limitation by giving them exclusive and original jurisdiction in all matters pertaining to Probate Courts, we conclude that, in the transaction of such business, they should be regarded as Courts of superior jurisdiction, as contra-distinguished from Courts of inferior and limited jurisdiction. Having arrived at this conclusion, we are to accord to their judgments and proceedings in such matters, whenever they happen to come in question collaterally, all the [309]*309presumptions of law pertaining to the judgments and proceedings of that description of Courts.

“The true line of distinction between Courts whose decisions are conclusive, if not removed to an Appellate Court, and those whose proceedings are nullities, if their jurisdiction does not appear on their face, is this:

“A Court which is competent, by its constitution, to decide on its own jurisdiction, and to exercise it to a final judgment, without setting forth in their proceedings the facts and evidence on which it is rendered, whose record is absolute verity, not to be impugned by averment, or proof to the contrary, is of the first description; there can be no judicial inspection behind the judgment save by appellate power. A Court which is so constituted that its judgment can be looked through for the facts and evidence which are necessary to sustain it, whose decision is not evidence of itself to show jurisdiction and its lawful exercise, is of the latter description; every requisite for either must appear on the face of their proceedings, or they are nullities.” (2 How. TJ. S. 341.)

“A judicial record” is defined to be “the record, official entry or files of the proceedings in a Court of justice.” (Civ. Code, § 719.)

These proceedings and orders of the County Court, in the matter of the estate of Tustin, deceased, are “judicial records,” as they come clearly within this.

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Bluebook (online)
4 Or. 305, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tustin-v-gaunt-or-1873.