29 Kan. 158 | Kan. | 1883
The opinion of the court was delivered by
This action was commenced on the 25th of November, 1876, by the commissioners of Rice county, in the district court of that county, against the defendant, Black-man E. Lawrence, county treasurer, and the sureties upon his official bond. The petition set forth, among other things, that the defendant, as county treasurer of Rice county, collected $20,000, which he neglected and refused to render a just and true account of, and which he neglected and refused to pay over, although duly demanded of him by the proper authorities. Issue was joined upon the petition by all the parties, the defendants filing an answer containing a general denial. In June, 1877, by agreement, a change of venue was
Sec. 338, ch. 82, Comp. Laws 1879, reads:
“ Whenever any person shall be imprisoned in the penitentiary for a term less than his natural life, a trustee, to take charge of and' manage his estate, may be appointed by the probate court of the county in which said convict last resided; or, if he have no known place of abode, then by the eoprt of the county in which the conviction was had, on the application of any of his relatives, or any relative of Lis wife, or any creditor.”
Sec. 343 of said chapter 82, is:
“Such trustee may sue for and recover, in his own name, any of the estate, property or effects belonging to, and all debts and sums of money due or to become due to such imprisoned convict, and may prosecute and defend all actions commenced by or against such convict.”
Under these and the other sections of the article relating to the custody and management of the estates of convicts, we think that the service of a summons upon a defendant, while imprisoned in the penitentiary for a term of years — excepting in a single instance hereafter noticed — must be treated as void, and that the conviction, sentence and imprisonment of the defendant in the state penitentiary, pending the action against him prior to the hearing or trial thereof, must abate the action;' at least, a judgment rendered in such a case may be treated as a nullity and set aside by the court rendering it, upon proper proceedings had. (Comp. Laws 1879, art. 17, 770-773.) Of course, if a trustee is "appointed under the statute, he may contest an action already commenced against the convict, and the judgment thus rendered would be valid in all respects. The provisions of said article 17 prescribe the remedy to be pursued by the court, when the civil rights of the debtor are suspended by imprisonment in the ■ penitentiary under sentence for life, or for a term of years less than life, and these provisions, in the nature of things, are and ought to be exclusive, not merely cumulative. In
We are referred by counsel to the case of Davis v. Duffey. 8 Bosw. 617, as an authority sustaining the doctrine that process for the commencement of an action against a convict may be served upon him in prison, and that conviction and sentence of a convict to prison do not abate an action pending against him. That decision comes from an inferior court, and is made upon the provisions of a statute of New York, which is not before us and which we have been unable to examine; but the reading of that decision shows that it is in conflict with the opinion of the trial judge, Mr. Justice Hoffman, and also in conflict with Davis v. Érhardt, decided at a prior general term held by Justices Duer, Campbell, and Slosson.
Further, it was decided in O’Brien v. Hagan, 1 Duer, 664, that when the plaintiff or defendant in a civil actjon is sentenced to imprisonment in the state prison, although only for a term of years, the suit is abated.
Again, our attention is’ called to § 639 of the tcivil pode,
Counsel further insist, that as a jurisdiction was rightfully obtained in the first instance over the defendant, that the judgment rendered was good, notwithstanding his conviction, sentence and imprisonment, and then assert the law to be that if jurisdiction be obtained over the defendant in his lifetime, a judgment rendered against him subsequent to his death is not void, thereby intending to make the application that as the defendant was properly served with the process in the first instance, the judgment was not a nullity. If counsel intend to assert that the judgment obtained in an action which is commenced against a party in his lifetime is valid and binding, notwithstanding the death of the party before the hearing or trial,, we do not assent. “ In some cases after jurisdiction has been obtained, and some particular proceeding has been commenced before the death of either party, such particular proceeding may be carried pn to completion after the death of one or both of the parties, the whole thing relating back to the time of the commencement of the proceeding. This is illustrated by the sale of property on execution after the death of one of the parties where the property was levied on under such execution before such death. Also
“The death of a party before the judgment rendered does not make the judgment void, but it is error óf fact for which the same may be recalled or revoked by writ of error r ethrnable in the same court where the record remains, called a writ of error coram vobis, or quae coram vobis resident, for error in fact is not error of the judges, and reversing it is not reversing their own judgment.”
In Loring v. Folger, 7 Gray, 505, the question was whether the judgment was to be treated as wholly void or merely voidable upon a writ of error, and it was held that the judgment was a nullity, and might be avoided by the administrator without a writ of error. In Coleman v. McAnnulty, 16 Mo. 173, it was decided that plaintiff’s death did not render the judgment void, but only voidable. In Yaple v. Titus, 41 Pa. St. 195, the judgment was rendered against a person after his death, and it was held that it was reversible if the fact and time of death appear in the record, and by writ coram vobis if the fact had to be shown aliunde. To the same effect are most of the cases .cited by counsel. On the other hand, many authorities hold that the judgment rendered against a dead person is absolutely void. Thus in Carter v. Carriger, 3 Yerg. 411, it is said: “That no proposition of law is more clear than this: that a judgment Tendered against a dead man is an absolute nullity. . The object of all law is the living man — not the dead body.” In Elwald v. Corbitt, 32 Cal. 493, it was held, that owing to the death of the defendant, the judgment was null and void. See Norton v. Jamison, 23 La. 102; McCulloch v. Norwood, 58 N. Y. 562; Sturgis v. Vanderbilt, 73 N Y. 384.
In the case at bar it is unnecessary for us to decide whether
Theorderand judgmentof the district court will be affirmed.