Barnes v. Leevy

100 S.E. 169 | S.C. | 1919

August 25, 1919. The opinion of the Court was delivered by George Stafford died leaving his will, wherein he devised a tract of land to his daughter, Sarah Cook, for life, with remainder to his granddaughter, Sarah Cook, for life, with remainder over "to the children of my said granddaughter who may be living at the time of her decease, to them and their heirs forever." The granddaughter, Sarah Cook, married George W. Barnes. Mr. and Mrs. Barnes, seeking to increase their income from this land, applied to the Court for permission to mortgage this land in the sum of $3,000. To this proceeding the children then in being were made parties. Permission was given, the mortgage was made, and, as might have been expected, was not paid. An action was brought to foreclose the mortgage, to which only Mr. and Mrs. Barnes were made parties. It seems that the Court refused to decree foreclosure unless the children then living who were minors were made parties defendant. The complaint alleges that they were not served with the summons and were not made parties. The land was sold, and is now claimed by the defendants. Mrs. Sarah Barnes is still alive.

This action is brought by the plaintiffs as contingent remaindermen for damages for waste and to enjoin future waste.

The defendants demurred to the complaint, and the demurrer was sustained upon three grounds: They will be considered in their order.

1. "Contingent remaindermen are not entitled to any action for waste, damages, nor injunction. See Pearson v.Yongue, 25 S.C. 162." *429 Pearson v. Yongue does not sustain the finding, for at page 167, of 25 S.C. we find:

"It may be said that unless these plaintiffs are entitled to an action, that here is a case, especially as to the commission of waste by the defendant, of a wrong without a remedy. We think not. It is not for this Court to suggest proper proceedings in any case, but we may venture to say that there is a remedy within reach, wherein all questions raised here could be brought within the jurisdiction of the Court, and its full judgment invoked and obtained."

Pearson v. Yongue was an action to establish the rights of contingent remaindermen and for damages for waste. This action includes an injunction to stay waste, and is not within the case of Pearson v. Yongue.

The case of Carson v. Kennerly, 8 Rich. Eq. 259, shows that this holding cannot be sustained.

2. "This proceeding is a collateral attack upon a judgment of this Court, which is not permissible. Kaylor v.Hiller, 77 S.C. 393 (58 S.E. 2); Rice v. Bamberg, 59 S.C. 498 (38 S.E. 200)."

This is a demurrer, and admits the facts set forth in the complaint. Even if the complaint, as set forth in the record, be held to allege that the judgment roll shows affirmatively that the plaintiffs were not served, yet that statement is a conclusion of fact. The judgment roll was made a part of the complaint, and the judgment is not the record.

We must, therefore, assume, unless the contrary appears in the record, that the facts set forth in the judgment roll do not show affirmatively that the plaintiffs were not served.

If the judgment roll does not show affirmatively that the plaintiffs were not served, then this action is a collateral attack. *430

In Love v. Domain, 91 S.C. 389, 74 S.E. 830, we find:

"The recent case of New York Life Insurance Companyv. Mobley, 90 S.C. 532 (73 S.E. 1032), is full authority for the position that judgment of the Circuit Court can only be attacked in a direct proceeding issued for that purpose when the jurisdictional defect does not appear upon the face thereof."

When the jurisdictional defect does not appear on the face of the proceedings, the judgment is voidable only, and the remedy is by a motion in the cause.

When the jurisdictional defect appears on the face of the proceedings, the judgment is void, and may be disregarded.

This holding is sustained.

3. "In the case of Barfield v. Barnes, 108 S.C. page 1 (93 S.E. 425), the decision of the Supreme Court is entirely pertinent and conclusive against plaintiffs herein, wherein the title to the land rests upon precisely the same grounds. The demurrer sustained, and complaint dismissed."

The case of Barfield v. Barnes may not be resadjudicata, but the holding of the Circuit Judge must be sustained under the doctrine of stare decisis.

The judgment is affirmed.

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