Eichhoff v. Eichhoff

107 Cal. 42 | Cal. | 1895

Temple, J.

This action was brought to set aside a judgment and decree rendered by the superior court of Marin county in 1882, annulling the marriage between Gustave Eichhoff and Melocene Eichhoff.

The complaint shows as a cause of action that in the suit for the annulment of the marriage this plaintiff, defendant in that action, was not served with summons. *46had no notice of the suit, and never appeared therein, and that said judgment was procured by the fraudulent practices of said Gustave Eichhoff.

At the trial the plaintiff to sustain her allegations put in evidence the judgment-roll in the action for the .annulment of the marriage, the petition for the appointment of a guardian ad litem, and the order appointing the guardian ad litem, and rested. The defendant put in no evidence, and the court thereupon rendered judgment for defendant, and the plaintiff appeals from the judgment. The appeal was taken within sixty days after the rendition of judgment.

The judgment-roll put in evidence shows that a summons was issued, but there was no proof of service. There was no memorandum that the default of the defendant had been entered as required by the code.

There was no appearance for the defendant in the case by answer or demurrer. There is no recital in the judgment to the.effect that summons had been served; but it is stated that a guardian ad litem had been duly appointed for the defendant, and that such guardian appeared in open' court and consented that the action be tried.

Neither in the petition for the appointment of a guardian ad litem, nor in the order appointing the guardian, is there a recital to the effect that the summons had been served on the defendant.

The only question presented on this appeal is whether, under these circumstances, the burden was cast on the plaintiff of proving that summons had not in fact been served on the defendant in the former action, or whether the defendant had the laboring oar.

The question as to the validity of this judgment was once before considered by this court. (In re Eichhoff, 101 Cal. 600.) There the attack upon the judgment was collateral. It was held by this court that the judgment was not void. It was said: “ The fact that the court has rendered a judgment implies a determination by it before it assumed to hear the controversy that it had *47jurisdiction over the subject matter of the action, and of the defendant against whom the complaint was directed. . „ „ 0 The judgment-roll in the present case is consistent with the fact that proper service was made upon the defendant before the hearing upon the complaint, and as any condition of facts consistent with the validity of the judgment will be presumed to have existed, rather than one which will defeat the judgment, it must be presumed, in support of the action of the court, that such service was shown to it, although it has not preserved any record thereof.”

This conclusion is determinative of the question here submitted.

The presumption that the court did have jurisdiction of the person of the defendant must be overcome by proof. Plaintiff’s action is based upon the well-established grounds of the jurisdiction of courts of equity to grant relief in cases of fraud, accident, or mistake. She set forth her equities in her complaint; but it is incumbent upon her, as plaintiff, not only to aver the facts constituting her case, but, if they are denied, to prove them. The judgment-roll did not prove want of service of summons, but the contrary. Under the decision the fact presumed is a fact adjudged. She was in this action allowed to prove that this adjudication was procured through fraud, or was a mistake; that she never was in fact served, and had no opportunity to be heard in the action.

The mere bringing of this suit does not change the presumptions arising from the fact of the rendition of the judgment. Apparently counsel have been misled by some cases in which judgments have been reversed on appeal. In McKinlay v. Tuttle, 42 Cal. 570, and in some other cases in which that case has been followed, it was held, in effect, that on an appeal the judgment would' be reversed for irregularities which would not render the judgment void if attacked collaterally. In Sichler v. Look, 93 Cal. 600, it is said: “That upon a direct appeal it is essential for the party seeking to sus*48tain the judgment to show by the record itself that the court had jurisdiction of the defendant, whereas, in a collateral attack, the entry of the judgment is itself conclusive of such jurisdiction. Upon a direct attack there is no presumption in favor of the existence of any fact essential to the jurisdiction of the court over the defendant, but, in all matters of which the judgment contains a record, its verity, in the absence of any contradictory evidence, will be presumed as fully as upon a collateral attack.”

The phrase “direct attack” in the above quotation evidently refers to appeals from the judgment.

In fact, when an action is brought in a court of equity to set aside a judgment at law the attack, although not collateral, is always indirect. (Freeman on Judgments, sec. 485.) The judgment is not under review, but an issue is being tried as to whether the plaintiff is entitled to have a court of equity interpose in his behalf. The judgment is not conclusive in such a case. The question to be determined is whether the adjudication was not procured by fraud or mistake. It may be said that in such a case the legal validity of the judgment is admitted, and it is because of its validity, or apparent validity, that the plaintiff requires to be relieved from it. Says Freeman, at section 495, speaking of judgments entered without notice to defendant: “ But proceedings in equity are peculiarly appropriate for the exposure of this infirmity. They permit of the formation of issues upon the question of service of process, and of the trial of those issues after full opportunity has been given to those who seek to sustain, as well as those who seek to avoid the judgment. If at such trial it satisfactorily appears that the defendant was not summoned, and had no notice of the suit, a sufficient excuse is shown for his neglect to defend, and equity will not allow the judgment, if unjust, to be used against him, no matter what jurisdictional recitals it contains.”

It will be seen that the burden is on the plaintiff, in such an action, to excuse himself for not defending when *49the judgment shows that he was in default for not doing so. By such an attack upon a judgment the plaintiff does not question or dispute its effect as an adjudication, but he seeks to be relieved from its operation upon equitable grounds.

The judgment is affirmed.

McFarland, J., and Henshaw, J., concurred.