48 N.Y.S. 468 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1897
This action is brought to set aside a conveyance of certain lands made by the defendant John Hogan to the defendant Margaret Hogan as fraudulent and void as against creditors. The foundation of the plaintiff’s title and right to bring the action is a judgment recovered in the City Court of Yonkers by the First National Bank of Yonkers against the defendant John Hogan and another upon a promissory note. The complaint in that action failed to allege that either the plaintiff or defendant resided in the city of Yonkers, or in a town of Westchester county adjoining thereto, as required by subdivision 4, section 3204 of the Code of Civil Procedure. On a previous appeal we reversed the judgment then before us upon the ground that the case did not show the jurisdiction of the City Court of Yonkers to render the judgment, the residence of the parties not appearing on the face of the record. (16 App. Div. 38.) In the opinion then delivered by' Justice Bbadley, it was stated that the question whether jurisdictional facts could be shown aliunde the record was the subject of diverse views and conflicting decisions,, but that it was unnecessary to decide the question as there was- no-evidence in the case of the actual residence of the parties. Upon the trial now under review, plaintiff proved by paroi evidence that John Hogan was, at the'time of the institution of the action in the-City Court of Yonkers, a resident of that city. It, therefore, now becomes necessary for us to decide the question then left undetermined, whether it is permissible to sustain the jurisdiction of the^
I cannot find that this question has ever been directly adjudicated by any decision of the. courts of this Staté where the point was necessarily involved, except one, though many declarations on the subject are to be found in judicial opinions. The law seems settled in this State that, while the jurisdiction of. any court of the subject-matter, or of the person of the defendant, may be assailed collaterally (Ferguson v. Crawford, 70 N. Y. 253), the jurisdiction of superior courts will be presumed, and this though the record fails to recite the requisité jurisdictional facts and the court be one of limited jurisdiction. Thus it has been held, in a long line of cases (the last of which is Continental Ins. Co. v. Rhoads, 119 U. S. 237), that the jurisdiction of the United States Circuit Court must appear affirmatively by the record ; and that if the record does not show the citizenship of the parties where the jurisdiction of the Circuit Court depends on citizenship alone, the judgment will be reversed on appeal. But it is equally settled by authority that such a defect, or the failure of the record to show jurisdiction, does not render the judgment of the Circuit Coxirt void when attacked collaterally. (M'Cormick v. Sullivant, 10 Wheat. 192; Ex parte Watkins, 3 Pet. 193; Ruckman v. Cowell, 1 N. Y. 505; Chemung Canal Bank v. Judson, 8 id. 254.) Indeed, under the authority of the last two cases cited, the failure of the record to recite the jxuisdictional facts .does not even depidve the judgment of the presumption that the court had acquired jxxrisdiction. It is, therefore, clear that the reversal on appeal of the jxxdgxnent of a coxirt of limited jurisdiction for failxire in the record to show the jurisdictional facts, is not an authority for the contention that such a judgment is void, but simply proves it en-oneous. It may be conceded that the City Court of Yonkers and the County Courts of various coxxnties are. of the same character, that is to say, they are not only coxxrts of limited jurisdiction, but ai-e inferior courts; and the decision that, in actions in the County Court, the residence of the parties must be averred in the complaint or the complaint will be subject to demurrer, is entirely applicable to actions in the City Court of Yonkers. But those cases which hold that such judgments will be revei’sed on appeal (Frees v. Ford, 6 N. Y. 176; Gilbert v. York,
In Van Deusen v. Sweet (51 N. Y. 378) the question arose as to the admissibilty of an inquisition in lunacy issued by the County Court of Saratoga county, where the record did not show that the alleged lunatic was a resident of that county, blit the fact appeared by other1 evidence. The admission of the inquisition was held not error. It was said by Lott, Ch. C., speaking of the appellant’s contention : “ He, however, claims that ‘ the proceeding having been instituted in the' County Court, a court of special and limited jurisdiction, the record should show affirmatively and on its face that jurisdiction was acquired by that court over the subject-matter as well as of the person of the alleged lunatic, in order to warrant the court in issuing the writ in question.’ * * * In answer to which it is. sufficient and only necessary to say that the record is not required to show affirmatively and on its face those facts. It is enough that they did exist and were properly shown to the court.” This case,, in the absence of - other authority, would be conclusive on the question before us were it certain that a proper objection was taken on the trial. An examination of the printed case leaves the matter in some doubt. In the other cases, as already stated, the point was not necessarily involved, and it will be necessary to refer to only a few of those cases. In Frees v. Ford (supra) it was declared in the prevailing opinion, in reference to the judgments of courts of limited jurisdiction, “to all such courts the rule universally applies that their jurisdiction must appear upon the record,” But this case was a direct appeal from the judgment. Ford v. Babcock (1 Den. 158) and Walker v. Moseley (5 id. 102) deal merely with questions of pleading and are not in point. On the other hand, in Jenks v. Stebbins (11 Johns. 224) it was held of a discharge under the Insolvent Act that it was incumbent on the debtor to prove that the commissioner had jurisdiction of his case, and it was said: “ This he might
The question has arisen in the State of California. It was there held, in the case of Jolley v. Foltz (34 Cal. 321), that where the record is silent the jurisdiction of the court may be proved by paroi. -Mr. Freeman, in his work on Judgments (§ 518), says, referring to the California case: “ The question has been directly involved and decided in a decision in which the rule that jurisdiction must be apparent on the face of the proceedings was limited to those jurisdictional facts which the law directs the court to set forth on its records. Any other fact essential tó jurisdiction may be established by evidence aliunde; and this position, while controverted in many of the States; and perhaps not yet sustained by the majority of the decisions upon the subject, is, in our judgment, sup- ■ ported by the better reasons and destined to gain adherents.”
The judgment appealed from should be affirmed, with costs.
All concurred.
Judgment affirmed, with costs.