156 Va. 635 | Va. | 1931
delivered the opinion of the court.
At its May term, 1930, Eubank and Caldwell, Inc., after due notice to1 R. H. Fuller, moved the Circuit Court of Halifax county to vacate and annul a certain judgment which had been entered in its common-law order book, which reads as follows:
“Virginia: In the Circuit Court of Halifax county, on Friday the 31st day of January, 1930, nineteen hundred and thirty.
“Present: The Hon. E. W. Hudgins, Judge.
“R. H. Fuller, Plaintiff
vs.
“Eubank & Caldwell, Inc., Defendant.
“On motion by the defendants to set aside verdict of jury.
“By consent of parties by counsel, it is ordered that this matter be heard and determined and this order entered as of January 31, 1930, and shall in all respects be considered as entered on said date.
“This day came the parties by counsel, and the defendant having heretofore moved the court to set aside the verdict of the jury rendered in favor of the plaintiff on the 11th day of
The ground upon which the motion was made is that this judgment was rendered and the entry thereof made upon the order book on February 7, 1930, by Judge E. W. Hudgins, former judge of the Circuit Court of Halifax county, who had resigned, effective as of midnight January 31, 1930, and had qualified as a Justice of the Supreme Court of Appeals of Virginia on February 1, 1930, and therefore he was not the judge of the Circuit Court of Halifax county on February 7th, when the judgment was rendered.
The trial court held that the judgment was valid, and denied the motion of Eubank and Caldwell, Inc., and it is to this ruling of the trial court that Eubank and Caldwell, Inc., assign error.
The record shows, beyond doubt, that counsel for the plaintiff in error, with full knowledge of the fact that Judge Hudgins would not be the judge of the Circuit Court of Hali
Under these undisputed facts, the plaintiff in error is clearly estopped to deny the validity of the judgment, even though it may be void.
When a party expressly consents and agrees to the entry of a void judgment, with full knowledge of its invalidity, accepts the benefits of it, accepts and treats it as valid and binding in all respects, he will not be permitted later to show its invalidity for he is estopped. He is not permitted to affirm its validity and later repudiate it. He cannot claim that it is valid and later claim that it is void.
Parties may lawfully agree to confirm a void judgment. It may be accepted as valid by their consent.
In addition to expressly consenting to the entry of the judgment in this case, counsel has completely ratified and confirmed it. He accepted its validity and finality and dealt with it as an appealable judgment. He moved for a suspension of
This court should not set aside an agreement made between attorneys with full knowledge of all the circumstances and acted upon by a judge who at the time of the agreement was the duly qualified judge of the court in which the agreement was to be performed.
The ends of justice demand that this court should hold that the plaintiff in error is estopped to attack the judgment.
The judgment of the trial court is affirmed.
Affirmed.
Holt and Epes, JJ., dissenting.