Webber v. Stanton

1 Mich. N.P. 97
CourtCircuit Court of the 10th Circuit of Michigan
DecidedJuly 1, 1864
StatusPublished

This text of 1 Mich. N.P. 97 (Webber v. Stanton) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Circuit Court of the 10th Circuit of Michigan primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Webber v. Stanton, 1 Mich. N.P. 97 (Mich. Super. Ct. 1864).

Opinion

•By the Court,

Sutherland, J.

This action js brought, to-r'e-cover the amount of a judgment in this Court rendered Decern-: her 7,1855, and of a decree for costs made in Chanceiy December 8, 1854, against the defendant in favor of Stephen D. Sayre, now deceased. • No question is raised except as to the plaintiff's right to recover on the judgment. Sayre died on the day suciceeding the trial before the Court without a jury, and two days before the rendition of the judgment.-

It is insisted for the defendant that the suit abated on the death of Sayre, and that the judgment, being rendered ' after-wards, is void.

There is no doubt that by the common law a suit abates on the death of a sole plaintiff before judgment. 2 Tidd's Prac., 116; Hildreth vs. Thompson, 16 Mass. R., 191.

But as the rule was téchnical and served no substantial purpose of justice in cases' in which the death occurred after the commencement of the term in which the trial was, had, Courts [98]*98have endeavored to save to the successful party the fruits of his recovery by resort to the fiction of making all judgments bear date of, the first day of term. 1 Burr. Pr., 281; 18 Wend., 653; 7 Cow., 281; 7 Term. R., 31. Judgments were, however, fjre- ' quently delayed until after the term :• then, to prevent the effeot of the death-of a party in abating the suit, Courts were accustomed to allow the judgment to be entered nunc pro tunc, as of the date when the deceased party was living, if the party recovering was then entitled to judgment. Earle vs. Brown, 1 Wilson, 302; Spaulding vs. Congden, 18 Wend., 543; Ryghtmyre vs. Durham, 12 Wend., 245; North vs. Pepper, 20 Id., 678; 1 Bac. Abr., 15; Tooker vs. Duke of Beaufort, 1 Burrows, 147; Trecawley vs. Bishop of Winchester, Id., 221, 226; Mayor, &c., vs. Berry, 4 Id., 2277; Goddard vs. Bolster, 6 Me., 427; Toulmin vs. Anderson, 1 Taunt., 385; Mackay vs. Rhineland, 1, John. Cas, 410; Bridges vs. Smith, 8 Bing., 28; Green vs. Cobden, 4 Scott, 486; Key vs. Goodwin. 1 Moore & Scott, 620.

The application to have the judgment so entered was addressed to the discretion of the Co'urt, and unless within the statute of 17 Charles II, was refused, if the delay was caused by the laches of the party or his representatives, or if some prejudice would arise to the other party to which he otherwise could not be subjeot. Freeman vs. Trunah, 12 Com. B., 406; Wilkes vs. Perks, 5 Man. & Gr., 376.

The judgment proved in this case was delayed wholly by the not of the’ Court. It was, therefore, an undoubted case for allowing the judgment to be entered anterior to the plaintiff’s death. It was not so entered; nor is it within the statute of Charles II., as'the death did not occur between verdict and judgment, unless the doctrine of relation to the first day of the term is in force.

The judgment roll, of that system of practice which recog- ' mized that fiction of relation, showed no other date than the first day of the term; and to prevent one party gaining a prefe-' rence over another by reason of the Court’s inability to try and decide all the cases in one day, and to overreach fraudulent dispositions of property on which the judgment would be a lien, or out of which it could be satisfied, all judgments, in the absence [99]*99of any other date, are deemed to have been recovered on the first day of the term. Couth vs. Walker, 2 Leigh, 268; Withers vs. Carter, 4 Gratt., 407.

That doctrine, however, was held not to apply after a statute had been enacted requiring the date of the judgment entry to be expressed, (Lambirth vs. Barrington, 2 Bing. N. C., 149,) nor did it ever apply, it would seem, if the state of the case was such, for any reason of which the Court was judicially cognizant, that judgment could not have been rendered on the day on which it would otherwise bear date by rotation, (Swan vs. Broom, 8 Burrow, 1595; Wynne vs. Wynne, 1 Wilson, 35, 42,) or if there was any memorandum, or the like, in the record showing another date. 3 Salk., 212; Miller vs Bradley, 8 Mod, 190.

It is obvious, therefore, that since our record consists of the journal entries and files, each of which has a recognized date, no other can by any fiction be substituted..

Hence, the validity of the judgment in question depends on whether, if rendered at a time when the Court would deem it proper to render it, even though advised then of the death, and for regularity would order it entered nunc pro tunc, it shall be held irregular because entered at the actual date of the determination ; and if irregular, whether it is void or only voidable.

> If Courts have no jurisdiction, by reason of a party’s death, to render a judgment, then it. ought to follow, and would, as a necessary consequence, that they would refrain from rendering it if the death were seasonably suggested. Courts do not, however, decline, in such cases, to pronounce judgment. Though they have been accustomed to affix another date to the adjudication, yet that ante dating should not be regarded as done to hide under the sanctity of a judicial record, which cannot be contradicted, á fatal defect of jurisdiction. It would be a reproach to any Court to usurp authority and after its exercise to conceal the excess of jurisdiction by a false record. By proceeding to judgment as they do after the death of a party hdS been suggested, Courts recognize the power to adjudge notwithstanding the death and the consequent technical abatement of the suit. This circuity, while it is a tacit concession of the irregularity of a decision subsequent to the death of. a party, is [100]*100an assertion of jurisdiction; but as judgments so rendered might sometimes prejudice the rights of one of the parties, or his representatives, or the rights of third persons, it is not a matter of course to render them. The course of decisions on that subject has clearly marked the boundaries of that discretion which is exercised in pronouncing or declining to pronounce- judgments nunc pro tunc. It has been usually exercised in granting or denying a motion to enter a judgment as of a former date. But since judgments are not liens upon property until the levy of execution, the rights of bona fide purchasers and incumbrancers cannot be overreached. There are not the same considerations as formerly to restrain Courts in the exercise of this discretion.

If verdicts and judgments rendered after the death of a party. were deemed regular, the rights of parties, and especially those of the deceased party’s representatives, might frequently be sacrificed because of the absence of any appeal to this discretion. There is, therefore, a peculiar propriety in obliging the party who seeks the benefit of the judgment to move for regularity in such form as will bring the fact of the death to the notice of the Court;.

A judgment entered after the death of a sole plaintiff is, consequently, irregular in a technical sense unless it occur between verdict and judgment.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1 Mich. N.P. 97, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/webber-v-stanton-micirct10-1864.