36 F. 646 | U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Western Virginia | 1888
This suit is brought by the plaintiff for the partition and the assignment of an interest claimed by her in certain lands in Smyth county, Va. The cause presents the following state of facts: Joseph Scott, of Smyth county, died in the year 1842, intestate, and seized of considerable real estate. He left a widow, Ann Scott, and six children, his heirs at law, viz., William Scott; John H. Scott; Elizabeth, who intermarried with James Porter; Rachel, who intermarried with Hiram Greever; Isabella, who intermarried with James Higginbotham; and Ann, the plaintiff in this suit, who intermarried during the life-time of her father, the said Joseph Scott, with James C. Beattie, now deceased. In 1843 William Scott purchased the interest of James Porter and wife in the said real estate of Joseph Scott, deceased. In the same year John H. Scott purchased the interest of Greever and wife in said lands, and at ¿'bankrupt sale bought the life-estate of James C. Beattie in'the interest of his wife, the plaintiff here. And in December, 1843, the plaintiff
The plaintiff, in support of her right to recover one-third of the land assigned to John H. Scott-in the suit in Smyth county, being one-sixth interest in the estate of her father, Joseph Scott, deceased, relies on the following grounds: First, that she and her said husband, James C. Beat-tie, were not made parties defendant to said partition suit in Smyth
It is insisted on the part of the defendants that the right of the plaintiff to bring this suit is barred by the statute of limitations of entry on, or action to recover, land. Chapter 146, §§ 1, 4, 5, Code Va. 1878. Section 1 provides that “no person shall make an entry on, or bring an action to recover any, land * * * but within ten years next after the time at which the right to make such entry or bring such action shall have first accrued to himself, or to some person through whom he claims.” Section 4 provides:
“If at the time at which the right of any person to make entry or to bring an action to recover land shall have first accrued, such person was an infant, married woman, or insane, then such person, or the person claiming through him, may, notwithstanding the said period mentioned in the first section shall have expired, make an entry on and bring an action to recover such land within ten years next after the time at which the person to whom such right shall have first accrued as aforesaid'shall have ceased to be under such disability as existed when the same so accrued, or shall have died, whichever shall first have happened.”
Section 5 provides:
“The preceding section is subject to these provisions: That no such entry or action shall be made or brought by any person, who, at the time at which his right to make or bring the same shall have first accrued, shall be under any such disability, or by any person claiming through him, but within thirty years next after the time at which such right shall have first accrued, although the person under disability at such time may have remained under the same during the whole of such thirty years, or although the term often years from the period at which he shall have ceased to be under any such disability, or have died, shall not have expired; and when any person shall be under any such disability at tlie time at which his right to make an entry or bring an action shall have first accrued, dnd shall depart this life without having ceased to be under any such disability, no time to make an entry or to bring an action beyond the time prescribed in the first section next after the right of such person shall have first accrued, or the ten years next after the period of his death, shall be allowed by the reason of the disability of any other person.”
The defendants claim that the plaintiff’s right to bring this suit is by the foregoing provisions of the statute barred by a lapse of 30 years, and this notwithstanding she was under the disability of coverture during the whole of that time. They insist that her right of action accrued in 1842, and that she did not institute her suit until the year 1886, a period of 44 years having passed from the time she might have brought it, and that, after deducting the time during which the Virginia stay law
The defendants, in answer to the allegation in the plaintiff’s bill that she and her husband, James C. Beattie, were not made parties to the proceedings in the partition suit of John H. Scott v. Joseph Scott’s widow and heirs, in the circuit court of Smyth county, and that there were no legal proceedings as to her, rely upon the recitals in the decree entered in said suit October 6, 1847, to show that she and her husband were duly summoned by order of publication. It appears that the original process, the order of publication, if any, and other papers, have been lost from the files of the chancery suit in Smyth county. The decree of October 6, 1847, as to the order of publication says:
“And the order of publication awarded against the absent defendants having been duly posted and published, and the subpoenas against the other defendants having been returned executed more than two months since, and all the said defendants failing to answer, the bill is taken for confessed as to them. ”
The plaintiff in her bill states she and her husband were at the time of the institution of that suit citizens of the state of Missouri, and of course absent defendants. So far as the records in that suit, and the proceedings in this, show, all of the other defendants in that suit were residents of the state of Virginia. The recital in the decree that the order of publication was duly posted and published, must be received as evidence, that the statutory requirements as to orders of publication were complied with, and is conclusive of the fact that the plaintiff was made a party defendant to the suit in Smyth county. This is established by numerous decisions.
In Craig v. Sebrell, 9 Grat. 131, on an appeal from the circuit court, it was held in the case of an absent defendant, that when the decree recited that the cause came on to be heard as to him on the bill, answer, exhibits, etc., and an order of publication duly executed, this was conclusive that the order had been made, published in the newspaper, and posted at the front door of the court-house. If the recital in a decree of service of notice be sufficient on an appeal to a court of errors, it surely cannot be successfully assailed in a collateral suit. In another case of
The order of publication, being duly executed as to the absent defendants Beattie and wife, gave the court jurisdiction of all the parties and of the subj.ect-matter of the suit. It is not contended that the court was without authority to decree, a partition of the lands of Joseph Scott, deceased, among the persons entitled thereto. It must be conceded that, under the provisions of Code Ya. 1849, §§ 1-3, c. 124, the court had jurisdiction to decree a partition of the lands by allotment, by metes and bounds, or by a sale of the lands, and division of the proceeds. Section 1 of said chapter says: “The court, in the exercise of such jurisdiction, may take cognizance of all questions of law, affecting the legal title, that may arise in any proceeding.” The court having jurisdiction of the parties and of the subject-matter of the suit, and the authority to take cognizance of all questions of law affecting the legal title that might arise in the proceedings, we are brought to the consideration of the question: Is it in the power of this court to pass upon the correctness of the decisions, decrees, orders, and proceedings of the circuit court of Smyth county, in the case of John H. Scott v. Joseph Scott’s widow and heirs, wherein the court decreed that the interest of the plaintiff in this suit in the lands of her father, Joseph Scott, deceased, and for which she is suing here, was the property of her brother, John H. Scott, and which was accordingly assigned to him by commissioners appointed by the court, which assignment was reported to and confirmed by the court? It is well settled by numerous authorities, that when a court has jurisdiction of the parties, and of the subject-matter of litigation, and it has not exceeded its jurisdiction, or acted beyond its authority, the correctness of its judgments,decrees, or proceedings cannot be inquired into collaterally. We will quote briefly from a few of the many cases in which this principle has been distinctly recognized:
“When a court has jurisdiction, it has a right to decide every question which occurs in the case; and, whether its decision be correct or otherwise, its judgment, until reversed, is regarded as binding in every other court. But,, if it act without authority, its judgments and orders are regarded as nullities. ” Elliott v. Peirsol, 1 Pet. 328.
In another case the court said:
“The record of this case is introduced collaterally as evidence of title in another suit, between other parties, and before a court which has no jurisdiction to reverse or set aside that judgment, however erroneous it may be. Nor can it disregard that judgment, or refuse to give it effect, on any other ground than a want of jurisdiction in the court which rendered it. ” Cooper v. Reynolds, 10 Wall. 308.
“And, in considering (.he grounds on which it is sought to repel the bar of this decree, we must disregard at once all that do not attack the j urisdiction of the court over the cause or the parties. It cannot be assailed collaterally for mere error.” Colt v. Colt, 111 U. S. 566, 4 Sup. Ct. Rep. 553.
The following is from a decision of the Virginia court of appeals:
“Ho matter how irregular or how erroneous may have been the proceedings in that suit, they cannot be inquired into in this. That would be to assail collaterally the judgment of a court of record which had jurisdiction of the parties and of the subject-matter. This can never be done.” Lancaster v. Wilson, 27 Grat. 624.
See, also, Woodhouse v. Fillbates, 77 Va. 317; Wimbish v. Breeden, Id. 324; Wilcher v. Robertson, 78 Va. 602; Hill v. Woodward, Id. 765; Avgno v. Schmidt, 113 U. S. 293, 5 Sup. Ct. Rep. 487; Cox v. Thomas' Adm’x, 9 Grat. 323; Cline’s Heirs v. Catron, 22 Grat. 378; Wilson v. Smith, Id. 493. In the light of this unbroken line of decisions it is not in the power of this court to pass upon the validity of the deed from the plaintiff to her brother, John II. Scott, conveying to him her interest in her father’s estate. That deed was in evidence in the suit of Scott v. Scott’s widow and heirs in the circuit court oh Smyth county. Whether it was accompanied by other testimony the record does not show, and it is immaterial. That court decided that the deed conveyed the plaintiff’s interest in her father’s lands to John H. Scotf, decreed the assignment of the same to said Scott, which was done, and the assignment confirmed by the court. Whatever errors were committed by that court were matters lo be corrected on appeal. Its decisions cannot be called in question in this collateral way. The plaintiff’s bill must be dismissed. This conclusion of this cause is not only in accordance tyith well-settled legal principles, but is in harmony with the demands of substantial justice. The plaintiff has once received pay for the land which she claims in this suit. It would be a great hardship on the present owners of the land to require them to surrender it to the plaintiff, they being innocent purchasers for value without notice. A decree will be entered dismissing the bill, with costs to the defendants.