Vandyke v. Bastedo

15 N.J.L. 224
CourtSupreme Court of New Jersey
DecidedFebruary 15, 1836
StatusPublished

This text of 15 N.J.L. 224 (Vandyke v. Bastedo) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Jersey primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Vandyke v. Bastedo, 15 N.J.L. 224 (N.J. 1836).

Opinion

Hornblower, C. J.

This was an action of trover. The plaintiff below, who is the defendant in this court, claimed title to the property in question, under a purchase at a Constable’s sale. Van Dyke-the defendant below, had subsequently seized and sold the property, under an execution directed to him as one of the Constables of the county of Middlesex. In support of his title, the plaintiff offered in evidence, the executions under which he purchased, together with the transcripts of the judgments upon which they had been issued.

To the admission of these documents, several objections were made by the defendant below; which objections were overruled' by the court, and bills of exception thereupon taken — and

1st. To one of the transcripts it was objected, that the state of demand, upon which it was founded, was not produced, nor any excuse given for its non-production;

The’state of demand in a court for the trial of small causes, is no part of the record; the Justice is not required by the statute to enter it upon his docket. Rev. Laws, 681, sect. 41. When' the single object is to prove the existence of a judgment, rendered in a court for the trial of small causes, it is sufficient to produce the transcript of the docket, duly exemplified. If it becomes material for the party to show the original cause of action in the court below, or the particular contents of the state of demand filed before the Justice, it may be necessary to produce a sworn or certified copy of it, or to prove that it has been lost or destroyed. But it is not necessary now, to show what would be the proper mode of proof in such case. On this occasion, it was entirely immaterial, what was the ground of action before the Justice. The only question was, whether there had been a judgment, in a competent court, to warrant the execution under which the sale had taken place. There was therefore no error in the decision of the court below.

[229]*2292d. To another of the transcripts offered in evidence, the defendant objected on the ground, that it did not appear, either that there had been a trial, or that the judgment had been rendered on confession. The judgment in this case, it appears, was rendered in the absence of the defendant, and without evidence. It is no doubt therefore an erroneous judgment, and might have been reversed, if a reversal had been sought for in a proper manner, and at the instance of the defendant in the suit. But the Court of Common Pleas could not, nor can this court, reject the record on that ground. The judgment is not a nullity, but a valid subsisting judgment, binding on the parties, until avoided by due course of law. It was a sufficient authority for the execution, and therefore a protection to the Constables, and to •bona fide purchasers under it. There was no error in overruling this objection.

8d. The defendant offered to prove that Thompson, the defendant in the executions .under which the plaintiff claimed title, at the time of the Constable’s sales, took the witness aside and requested him not to bid, as Bastedo the plaintiff in this suit, was bidding in the property for him. The court rejected this evidence; and they were clearly right in doing so. It would be destructive to all judicial sales, if a defendant in execution, might endager or defeat a purchaser’s title, by exparte representations of his own. It was no doubt competent for the party to show collusion between the purchaser and the defendant in execution; but the evidence offered, had no such tendency. The relationship said to exist between them, could not warrant a recourse to evidence, which between other parties, would be inadmissible.

4th. The defendant next offered to prove that Beriau, a plaintiff in one of the executions, under which Bastedo the plaintiff in this suit, claimed title, had admitted that his judgment was without any consideration ; and therefore fraudulent and void as against creditors. ’Phis too, the court very properly rejected, for reasons already assigned. Neither the plaintiff nor defendant in an execution, can defeat the title of a party claiming under it as a purchaser, by their conduct or admissions. The near relationship of the parties, and the great undervalue, at [230]*230which the articles were purchased by the plaintiff, and the fact if it was so, that the goods were left in the possession of the defendantin execution, were circumstances, calculated to induce suspicion of fraud. But whether the transaction was fraudulent or not, we .cannot determine, upon this bill of exceptions. No opinion of the court below, appears to have been desired or expressed on that subject; or if it was, no exception was taken to such opinion.

Nor can we reverse the judgment, on the ground of excessive damages. If the court below misdirected the jury on that point, the party should have excepted to the charge. If no charge was required, the court below was not bound to give one. But it does not follow, as the counsel for the plaintiff in error supposes, that because there was a color of right in the defendant, the.damages ought to have been for no more than the plaintiff had given for the property. If he was a bona fide purchaser, at 90 per cent, below its value, he would be entitled to recover in this action, its real value; though under the peculiar circumstances of the case, he might not be entitled to exemplary damages. The judgment must be affirmed, with costs.

Ford, J. This is a case of error. Bastedo brought an action of trover in the common Pleas of Middlesex, against Vandyke for the mules and oxen, formerly the property of John Thompson, sold upon executions against him, and purchased by Bastedo, at a public sale by the Constable. In support of this title, he offered in evidence the records of two judgments and executions against Thompson. These transcripts being objected to by the defendant, were, after argument, admitted in evidence by the court. All the errors assigned are for admission or rejection of evidence contrary, as is alleged, to law, and must be considered seriatim.

1st. One of the records of judgment against Thompson, stated that the action was commenced by summons served on him, but did not show in what manner-the officer had served it. Another record showed a judgment by default, without the least proof before the justice of the debt; another showed* judgment against the defendant for a larger sum than the plaintiff [231]*231demanded. These are errors and irregularity foi which the judgments might have been set aside, on a direct proceeding upon them, by certiorari or appeal, between the same parties, pursued according to law, within the time limited for that purpose. But the party injured is the only one that can take advantage of them, and he is not compelled to do it; for if he knows that the debt is due, why should he be forced to run himself to further cost and trouble? He may not only cure them by a release, but the law itself will cure them, if he does not complain of them in proper form and in a proper time. The judgment, so long as it stands unreversed, of any court of competent jurisdiction, and the record of such judgment, are of such high veracity and authority, that neither their truth nor justice may be denied or questioned, when produced in evidence, in any other court, between other parties.

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Bluebook (online)
15 N.J.L. 224, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/vandyke-v-bastedo-nj-1836.