Wright v. McKenzie

226 N.W. 270, 55 S.D. 300, 1929 S.D. LEXIS 161
CourtSouth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedJune 27, 1929
DocketFile No. 6380
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 226 N.W. 270 (Wright v. McKenzie) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering South Dakota Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wright v. McKenzie, 226 N.W. 270, 55 S.D. 300, 1929 S.D. LEXIS 161 (S.D. 1929).

Opinion

FULLER, C.

From the record it appears that one Wright, as receiver of the American National Bank of Three Forks, Mont., commenced an action against several persons in the circuit court [301]*301of Douglas count)-, for the purpose of determining the liens upon, or interests of the several parties in, a tract of land situated in said county. In that action the appellant, Slettebak, and the respondent Alex McKenzie, were both joined as defendants. Slettebak filed an answer to the complaint of plaintiff, Wright, receiver aforesaid, and therewith demanded affirmative relief, 'by way of cross-bill, against his codefendant Alex McKenzie. While the plaintiff pleaded a lien upon an undivided one-sixth interest in the land, acquired by one William R. McKenzie as an heir of Donald McKenzie, deceased, Slettebak’s cross-bill against his codefendant Alex McKenzie was for the adjudication in his favor of an alleged lien upon the interest of respondent, Alex McKenzie, so acquired by him, in the same tract. The interest covered by the cross-bill was embraced in the allegations of plaintiff’s complaint. The cross-bill having been duly served, by Slettebak upon McKenzie, the latter failed to make answer, and it is from that order ,of the circuit court, setting aside the default judgment entered on the cross-bill against McKenzie, and allowing him to make answer, that this appeal is taken. The appeal from this order presents the question whether the answer of McKenzie, upon which he proposed to resist the alleged lien of Slettebak in the land, is sufficient to constitute a defense.

A recital of facts, admitted for the purposes of the proceedings under review, may be taken from the cross-bill and the proposed answer thereto of respondent, McKenzie, as follows: Slettebak's alleged interest in the particular undivided one-sixth interest in the land here involved is based upon a certificate of sheriff's sale on execution issued April 14, 1925. The execution sale was had on a judgment for money by Slettebak, obtained and entered by default on July 18, 1922, against McKenzie. The judgment was entered in a suit by Slettebak against McKenzie upon a judgment previously obtained by ■ Slettebak against McKenzie in the circuit court on October 16, 1911. The suit upon this previously entered judgment was had without application for, or the entry of, any order, before or after the commencement of the action on the judgment, as required by Rev. Code 1919, § 2261, reading, so far as here material, as follows: “No action shall be brought upon a judgment rendered in any court of this state, except a court of a Justice of the Peace, between the same parties, [302]*302without leave of the Court for good cause shown, on notice to the adverse party.”

Retrospection of the proceedings on which applellant Slettebak’s lien is* based, asserted in the cross-bill and adjudged for him against McKenzie by default, leads, as above indicated, to a point where he is shown to have prosecuted to default judgment a suit on a domestic judgment of the circuit court between the same parties without leave of court first granted or thereafter obtained nunc pro tunc.

The exact question arising at this point is whether the statutory requirements for leave to bring the action is prerequisite to the entry of a valid judgment by default, for, if the judgment is void, it is foundationally inadequate to support appellant’s title, acquired on execution sale.

In contending that absence of the order mentioned is not a fatal defect, appellant calls attention to the case of Stoddard Mfg. Co. v. Mattice, 10 S. D. 253, 72 N. W. 891, wherein this court, after noting that the order for leave to bring suit had been entered in the circuit court nunc pro tunc, after issue joined, declared that: “As the manifest object of the legislature was to prohibit the suing upon judgments for the purpose of oppressing debtors by multifarious litig'ation and the needless accumulation of costs, the failure to obtain leave to sue is not made jurisdictional, but a mere irregularity, which in the absence of harassing circumstances was very properly cured by the order under consideration, granted upon notice to counsel for appellant, and by a court having jurisdiction of the persons and subject-matter of the action. Appellant lost no substantial right by the order, and there is no valid reason why a court may not, in furtherance of justice and in the exercise of a sound discretion, manifest its consent to the prosecution of a cause which shall operate retroactively, and thereby obviate the necessity of dismissing the action for the sole purpose of applying to the' court for leave to again institute his suit just as before.”

Respondent argues that leave to bring suit on a domestic judgment of the circuit court is jurisdictional, but so long a time has passed since the decision of Stoddard Mfg. Co. v. Mattice, without any modification of its language by subsequent decisions or legislative enactment, the court is now reluctant to reconsider the holding that leave to bring such an action is net jurisdictional [303]*303and that failure to comply with the statute is a mere irregularity. In this conclusion the court is influenced by the possibility that, in a period of 32 years, titles may have changed hands, and defects therein mar7 have been ignored in reliance upon the decision that lack of leave to sue on a domestic judgment is not jurisdictional.

What then is the effect of the rule, thus declared, on the case at bar, where no order allowing the bringing of action was obtained either before or after commencement of action on the judgment? To this proposition there can be but one answer. The complaint on the judgment stated1 a cause of action. -Service of process conferred jurisdiction over the person and subject-matter. Neither b)r pleading, objection, nor motion was any protest of defenda'nt McKenzie brought to the attention of the court. Within its jurisdiction of the person and subject-matter, the court entered judgment. No appeal -was taken. No motion was made for relief from the default or other proceeding timely had to question the propriety of the jdgment. Within the scope of principles declared in Stoddard Mfg. Co. v. Mattice, therefore, we conclude that, in the absence of objection for lack of leave to sue on the judgment of October 16, 1911, or motion timefy made to vacate the same, the judgment of appellant, Siettebak, against respondent, M'cIvenzie, of July 18, 1922, became conclusive after time for appeal expired, and that respondent cannot now question the validity of the certificate of the execution sale, of his interest in real estate based thereon. It follows that the proposed answer of respondent, McKenzie, in so far as it alleges defects -in the entry of appellant’s judgment, in the suit on judgment, does not state a defense.

The answer also sets forth as a first and separate defense the plea, in substance, that no leave of court was had' by appellant, as defendant in the instant case, to serve and file the cross-bill, that no summons or notice was served by appellant on respondent, his codefendant, in connection with the cross-bill, and that lack of court order and process served is jurisdictional. From the trial court’s memorandum, it is apparent that this portion of the proposed answer was considered sufficient to state a defenáe — a proposition disputed by appellant. If service of summons, notice, or other process with a cross-bill in equity or leave of court given is necessary, it would follow that the requirement might -be said to affect the jurisdiction [304]

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Bluebook (online)
226 N.W. 270, 55 S.D. 300, 1929 S.D. LEXIS 161, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wright-v-mckenzie-sd-1929.