delivered the opinion of the court.
Wilson, on the eleventh day of November, 1857, recovered judgment in one of the county courts in the State of Kentucky, against the plaintiff in error, for the sum of five thousand six hundred and thirty-four dollars and thirteen cents, which, on the thirty-first day of March, 1859, was affirmed in the Court of Appeals. Present record shows that the action in that case was assumpsit, aud that it was founded upon a certain promissory note, signed by the defendant in that suit, and dated at Vicksburg, in the State of Mississippi, on the tenth day of March, 1840, and that it was payable at the Merchants’ Dank, in New Orleans, and was duly indorsed to the plaintiff by the payee. Process was duly served upon the defendant, and he appeared in the case and pleaded to the declai'ation. Several defences were set up, but they were all finally overruled, and the verdict and judgment were for the plaintiff.
On the fourth day of June, 1854, the prevailing party in that suit instituted the present suit in the court below, which was an action of debt on that judgment, as appears by the transcript. Defendant was duly served with process, and appeared.and filed six pleas in answer to the action. Reference, howеver, need only be particularly made to the second and fourth, as they embody the material questions presented for decision. Substance and effect of the second plea were that the note, at the commencement of the suit in Kentucky, was barred by the statute of limitations of Mississippi, the defendant haviug been a domiciled citizen of that State when the cause of action accrued, and from that time to the commencement of the suit.
Fourth plea alleges that the judgment mentioned in the
First plea was nul tiel record, but the finding of the court under the issue joined, negatived the plea.
Third plea was payment, to which the plaintiff replied, аnd the jury found in his favor.
II. 1. Besting upon his second and fourth pleas, the defendant sued out this writ of error, and now seeks to reverse the judgment, upon the ground that the demurrers to those pleas should have been overruled. Views of the defendant were, and still are, that the second plea is a valid defence to the action on the judgment, under the statute of Mississippi passed in Februаry, 1857, and found in the code of that State which went into effect on the first day of November of that year. By that statute it was enacted that “ no action shall be maintained on any judgment or decree rendered by any court without this State against any person who, at the time of the commencement of the action in which such judgment or decree was or shall be rendered, was or shall be a resident of this State, in any ease where the cause of action would have been barred by any act of limitation of this State, if such suit had been brought therein.”
Material facts are that the defendant, being a citizen and resident of Mississipi, made the note to the payee, who indorsed the same to the plaintiff’, a citizen and resident of Kentucky. Such causes of action are barred by limitation, under the Mississippi statute, in six years after the cause of action accrues. Some time in 1853 the defendant went into Kentucky on a visit, and while there was sued on the note. He pleaded, among other pleas, the statute of limitations of Mississippi, and, on the first tidal, a verdict was found in his favor; but the judgment was revers'ed on appeal, and аt the second trial the verdict and. judgment were for the plaintiff’.
2. Undoubtedly, the second plea in this case is sufficient in form, and it is a good answer to the action if the statute
3. But the provision under consideration is not a statute of limitations as known to the law or the decisions of the courts upon that subject. Limitation, as used in such statutes, means a bar to the alleged right of the plaintiff' to recover in the action created by or arising out of the lapse of a certain time after the cause of action accrued, as appointеd by law.
Looking at the terms of this provision, it is quite obvious that it contains no element which can give it any such character. Plain effect of the provision is to. deny the right of the judgment creditor to sue at all, under any circumstances, and wholly irrespective of any lapse of time whatever, whether longer or shorter. . No day is given to such a creditor, but the prohibition is absolutе that no action shall be maintained on. any judgment or decree falling within the conditions set forth in the provision. Those conditions are addressed, not to the judgment, but to the cause of action,
Nothing can be plainer than the. proposition is, that the judgment mentioned in the declaration was a valid judgment in the State where it was rendered. Jurisdiction of the case was undeniable, aud the defendant being found in that jurisdiction, was duly served with process, and appeared and made full defence. Instead of being a statute of limitations in any sense known to the law, the provision, in legal effect, is but an attempt to give operation to the statute of limitations of that State in all the other States of the Union by denying the efficacy of any judgment recovered in another State against a citizen of Mississippi for any cаuse of action which was barred in her tribunals under that kvw. Where the cause of action which led to the judgment was not barred by her statute of limitations the judgment may be enforced; but if it would have been 'barred in her tribunals, under her statute, then the prohibition is absolute that no action shall be maintained on the judgment.
.4. Article four, section one, of the Constitution provides, that “full faith aud credit shall be given in each State to the public acts, records, and judicial proceedings of every other State. And the Congress may, by general laws, prescribe the manner in which such records shall be proved, and the effect thereof.” Congress has exercised that power, and in effect provided that the judicial records in one State shall be proved in the tribunals of another, by the attestation of the clerk, under the seal of the court, with the certificate of the judge that the attestation is in due form. 2. That such records so authenticated “ shall have such faith and credit given to them in every other court in the United States as they have by law or usage in the courts of the State from whence the said records were or shall be taken.”
Repeated decisions made since that time have affirmed the same rule, which is applicable in all similar cases where it appears that the court had jurisdiction of the cause, and that the defendant was duly served with process, or aрpeared and made defence.
5. Applying these rules to the present case, it is clear that the statute which is the foundation of the second plea in this case is unconstitutional and void as affecting the right of the plaintiff to enforce the judgment mentioned in the declaration. Beyond all doubt the judgment wras valid in Kentucky and conclusive between the parties in all her tribunals. Such was the decision of the highest court in the State, and it was undoubtedly correct; and if so, it is not competent for any other State to 'authorize its courts to open the merits and review the cause, much less to enact that such a judgment shall not receive the same faith and
II. 1. Second error assigned is that the court erred in sustaining the demurrer to the fourth plea, which alleged that the judgment was procured by the fraud of the plaintiff. First proposition assumed by the-present defendant is, that the plea is defective and insufficient, because it does not set forth the particular acts of the-plaintiff which are the subject of complaint. But the substance of the plea, if allowable at all, is well enough under a general demurrer, as in this case. Whether general, or special, a demurrer admits all such matters of fact as are sufficiently pleaded, and to that extent it is a direct admissiou that the facts as alleged are true.
Where the objection is to matter of substance, a general demurrer is sufficient; but-where it is to matter of form only, a special demurrer is necessary. Demurrers, says Chitty, are either general or special: general, when no particular causéis alleged; special, when the particular imperfection is pointed out and insisted upon as the ground of demurrer. The former will sufficе when the pleading is defective in substance, and the latter is requisite where the objection is only to the form of the pleading.
2. But the second objection is evidently to the substance of the plea, and therefore is properly before the court for decision. Substance of the second objection of the present defendant-to the fourth plea is, that inasmuch as the judgment is conclusive betiveen the parties in the State where it was rendered, it is equally so in every other court in the United States, and consequently that the plea of fraud in procuring the judgment is not a legal answer to the declaration. Principal question in the casе of Mills v. Duryee was whether nil debet was a good plea to an action founded on a judgment of another State. Much consideration was given
Cоngress, say the court, have declared the effect of the record by declaring what faith and credit shall be given to it. Adopting the language of the court in that case, we say that the defendant had full notice of the suit, and it is beyond all doubt that the judgment of the court was conclusive upon the parties in that State. “It must, therefore, be conclusive here also.” Unless the mеrits are open to exception and trial between the parties, it is difficult to see how the plea of fraud can be admitted as an answer to the action.
3. Domestic judgments, under the rules of the common law, could not be collaterally impeached or called in question if rendered in a couz’t of competent- jurisdiction. It could only be done directly by writ of error, petition for new trial, or by bill in chaneei’y. Third persons only, says-Saunders, could set up the defence of fraud or collusion, and not the parties to the record, whose only relief was in equity, except in the case of a judgment obtained on a cognovit or a warrant of attorney.
Common law rules placed foreign judgments upon a different footing, azid those zmlos z’ernain, as a general remark, unchanged to the present time. Under these rules a foreign judgment was prima fade evidence of the debt, and it was open to examination not only to show that the court in which it was rendered had no jurisdiction of the subject-matter, but also to show that the judgment was fraudulently obtained. Recent decisiozis, however, in the parent countz’y, hold that even a fоreign judgment is so far conclusive upon a defendaut that he is prevented from alleging that the promises upon which it is founded were never made or were obtained by fraud of the plaintiff.
Subject to those qualifications, the judgment of a State "court is conclusive in the courts of all the other States wherever the same matter is brought in controversy. Established rule is, thаt so long as the judgment remains in force it is of itself conclusive of the right of the plaintiff to the thing adjudged in’his favor, .and gives him a right to process, mesne or final,'as the case may be, to execute the judgment.
5. Exactly the same point was decided in the case of Benton v. Burgot,
Similar decisions have been made in the Supreme Court of Massachusetts, and it is there held that a party to a judgment cannot be permitted in equity, any more than at law, collaterally to impeach it on thе ground of mistake or fraud, when it is offered in evidence against him in support of the title which was in issue in the cause in which it was recovered.
For these reasons our conclusion is, that the fourth plea of the defendant is bad upon general demurrer, and that there is no error in the record. The judgment of the Circuit Court ‘ i, therefore,
Affirmed with costs.
Notes
Mississippi Code, 400.
Bronson v. Kinzie et al.,
Bouvier’s Dictionary, title Limitation.
1 Stat. at Large, 122; D’Arcy v. Ketchum et al.,
Mills v. Duryee,
Hampton v. McConnel,
Bissell v. Briggs, 9 Massachusetts, 462; United States Bank v. Merchants’ Bank,
2 Story on Constitution (3d ed.), § 1313.
Nowlan v. Geddes, 1 East, 634; Gundry v. Feltham, 1 Term, 334; Stephens on Pleading, 142.
1 Chitty’s Pleading, 663; Snyder v. Croy,
2 Saunders on Pleading and Evidence, part 1, p. 63.
Bank of Australasia v. Nias, 4 English Law and Equity, 252.
D’Arcy v. Ketchum et al.,
Voorhees v. United States Bank,
10 Sergeant & Rawle, 240.
Granger v. Clark, 22 Maine, 130.
Anderson v. Anderson, 8 Ohio, 108.
B. & W. Railroad v. Sparhawk,
McRae v. Mattoon, 13 Pickering, 57.
Atkinsons v. Allen, 12 Vermont, 624.
23 Vermont, 346.
3 Comstock, 522.
Dobson v. Pearce, 2 Kernan, 165.
Hollister v. Abbott,
