This action was brought to foreclose a mortgage, held by the plaintiff, on certain real estate in the county of Westchester. One of the defences was, that the rights of the plaintiff, as mortgagee, had been barred by a judgment of foreclosure of a mortgage prior to his, in favor of one McFarquahar, covering the same premises, under which judgment the premises had been sold to the defendant *255 Horton. It was alleged in the answer that the plaintiff was a defendant in the McFarquahar action,, in which the judgment had been rendered, and appeared therein, by John W. Mills, as his attorney, but did not put in any answer.
On the trial of the present action, the defendants, in support of this defence, put in evidence the judgment-roll in the last-mentioned action, which roll contained a notice of appearance for the present plaintiff, and a consent that judgment be entered, purporting to be signed by Mills. The judgment was entered by default for want of an answer, and on this consent, and recited that the summons had been served on the defendants therein, and that none of them had appeared, except the present plaintiff, by John W. Mills, his attorney, and some others named in the judgment.
Thereupon the plaintiff called Mills as a witness, and offered to prove by him, 1st. That the signature to the notice of appearance and consent a vas a forgery; 2d. That Mills was never authorized to appear for the plaintiff; and 3d. That he never did appear for him.
No proof of service of the summons on the plaintiff is attached to or contained in that judgment-roll, and it appears to be conceded on the present argument, as matter of fact, that no such service Avas made. The defendants rely Avholly upon the effect of the recital in the judgment and the notice of appearance contained in the judgment-roll, and claim that in a collateral action these import absolute verity and cannot be contradicted by extrinsic evidence.
They also claim that the case of
Brown
v.
Nichols
(
That decision does not reach the present case. It is not founded upon any doctrine which precludes a party from showing, as matter of fact, that he avrs never brought before
*256
. the court, or appeared in it, but is based upon á long line of authority, which holds that when an attorney of the court appears for a party his appearance is recognized and his authority will be presumed to the extent, at least, of giving-validity to the proceeding. That he is an officer of the court, amenable to it for misconduct, and to any party for whom he assumes to act without authority, for all damages occasioned by such action, and for reasons of public policy the court holds the appearance good, leaving the aggrieved pai’ty to his action for damages against the attorney, granting relief against the judgment, only in a direct application, and in case the attorney is shown to be irresponsible.
(Denton
v.
Noyes,
None of the principles upon which the decisions in Denton v. Noyes, and Brown v. Nichols rest, can be applied to such a case. There is no act of any officer of the court which public policy requires should be recognized. There is nc party against whom the innocent defendant can have redress. Ho •is sought to be held bound by a judgment when he was never personally summoned or had notice of the proceeding, which result has been frequently declared to be contrary to the first principles of justice, and this is sought to be accomplished by. means of a judgment entered upon forged papers, No principle of public policy requires or sanctions sustaining such a judgment. The only difficulty in the case arises upon the objection that the evidence offered tends to contradict the record, and from the adjudications which attach to the judgment of a court of general jurisdiction, a conclusive presumption of jurisdiction over the parties, which cannot be contradicted except by matter appearing on the face of the record itself.
It is an elementary principle recognized in all the cases that, to give binding effect to a judgment of any court, whether of general or limited jurisdiction, it is essential that *257 the court should have jurisdiction of the person as well as the subject-matter, and that the want of jurisdiction over either may always be set up against a judgment when sought to be enforced, or any benefit is claimed under it. There is no difference of opinion as to this general rule, but the point of difficulty is as to the manner in which this want of jurisdiction must be made to appear, in the case of a judgment of a domestic court of general jurisdiction, acting in the exercise of its general powers, when it comes in question in a collateral action: Whether, when the record is silent as to the steps taken to bring the parties into court, it may be proved by evidence that they were not legally summoned and did not. appear; or whether, when the record recites that they were summoned or appeared, such recitals may be contradicted by extrinsic evidence; or whether the jurisdiction over the person and subject-matter is a presumption of law, which cannot be contradicted, unless it appears on the face of the record itself that there was a want of such jurisdiction, as in, cases where the record shows that the service of process was by publication or some other method than personal.
On these points there has been as much diversity of opinion, especially between the courts of this State and those of other States, as upon any general question which can be mentioned, although there has as yet been no authoritative adjudication in this State on the subject. It is well settled by our own decisions, that in the case of a judgment of a court of general jurisdiction of a sister State, although it is entitled to the benefit of the presumption of jurisdiction which exists in favor of a judgment of one of our own courts, yet the want of jurisdiction may be shown by extrinsic evidence, and that even a recital in the judgment record that the defendant was served with process, or appeared by attorney, or of any other jurisdictional fact, is not conclusive, but may be contradicted by extrinsic evidence.
(Borden
v.
Fitch,,
*258
And the same rule prevails in some of the other States in regard to the judgments of courts of sister States. Although some have held, even in regard to such a judgment, that if the record contains recitals showing jurisdiction, they cannot be contradicted.
(Field
v.
Gibbs,
1 Peters, C. C. R, 155;
Roberts
v.
Caldwell,
After considerable research, I have been unable to find a single authoritative adjudication, in this or any other State, deciding that in the case of a domestic judgment of a court of general jurisdiction, want of jurisdiction over the person may be shown by extrinsic evidence, while there are a great number of adjudications in neighboring States, holding that, in the case of such judgments, parties and privies are estopped in collateral actions to deny the jurisdiction of the court over the person as well as the subject-matter, unless it appear on the face of the record that the court had not acquired jurisdiction; and that in such cases there is a conclusive presumption of law that jurisdiction was acquired by service of process or the appearance of. the party. The cases are very numerous, but the citation of a few of them will suffice.
In
Cook
v.
Darling
(
This plea was held bad on demurrer, on the ground that the judgment could not be impeached collaterally. In
Granger
v.
Clarke
(22 Maine, 128), also an action on a judgment, the plea was the same, with the addition that the judgment had been obtained by fraud; but it was held to constitute no defence.
Coit
v.
Haven
(
The same rule is held in
Penobscot. R. R. Co.
v.
Weeks
(52 Maine, 456);
Wingate
v.
Haywood
(40 N. H., 437);
Clark
v.
Bryan
(
There are many cases in other States, and in the courts of "the United States, containing expressions general in their character, which would seem to sanction the doctrine that a want of jurisdiction over the person or subject-matter may in all cases be shown by extrinsic evidence, and they are .sometimes cited as authorities to that effect.
(Elliott
v.
Pier
sol,
The learned annotators of Smiths’ Leading Cases, Hare & Wallace (1 Sm. L. Cases, vol. 1, p. 842 [marg].) sum the matter up by saying: “ Whatever the rule may be where the record is silent, it would seem clearly and conclusively established by a weight of authority too great for opposition, unless on the ground of local and peculiar law, that no one can contradict that which the record actually avers, and that a recital of notice or appearance, or a return of service by the sheriff in the record of a domestic court of general jurisdiction, is absolutely conclusive and cannot be disproved by extrinsic evidence.”
It is quite remarkable, however, that notAvithstanding the formidable array of authority in its favor, the courts of this State have never sustained this doctrine by any adjudication, but on the contrary the great weight of judicial opinion, and the views of some of our most distinguished jurists, are directly opposed to it.
As has been already stated, our courts haw3 settled by adjudication in regard to judgments of sister States, that the question of jurisdiction may be inquired into, and a Avant of jurisdiction over the ..person shoAvn by evidence,
*261
and have further decided (in opposition to the holding of «courts of some of the. other States) that this may be done, ■even if it involves the contradiction of a recital in the judgment record. In stating the reasons for this conclusion, our ■courts have founded it on general principles, quite as applicable to domestic judgments as to others, and save in one case
(Kerr
v. Kerr,
When we come to consider the effect of these authorities, it is -difficult to find any solid ground upon which to rest a distinction between domestic judgments and judgments of sister States in regard to this question, for under the provisions of the Constitution of the United States, which requires that full faith and credit shall be given in each •State to the public acts, records and judicial proceedings of every other State, it is now well settled that when a judgment of a court of a sister State is duly proved in a court of this State, it is entitled here to all the effect to which it is entitled in the courts of the State where rendered. If conclusive there it is equally conclusive in all the States of the Union; and whatever pleas would, be good to a suit therein in the State where rendered, and none others ■can be pleaded in any court in the United States.
(Hampton
v.
McConnel,
In holding, therefore, that a defense that the party was not served and did not appear, although the record stated that he did, was good, our courts must have held that such is the law of this State and the common law, and, consequently, that in the absence of proof of any special law to the contrary in the State where the judgment was rendered, it must be presumed to be also the law of that State. The judgments of our courts can stand on no other logical basis. The distinction which is made in almost all the other States of the Union between the effect of domestic judgments and judg *262 ments of sister States, in regard to the conclusiveness of the-presumption of jurisdiction over the person, is sought to be, explained, by saying that in regard to domestic judgments-the party aggrieved can obtain relief by application to the-court in which the judgment was rendered, or by writ of error, whereas in the case of a judgment rendered against, him in another State he would be obliged to go into a foreign jurisdiction for redress, which would be a manifestly inadequate protection; and therefore the Constitution may be construed so as to apply only where the persons affected by the judgment were within the operation of the proceeding. This explanation, however, does not remove the difficulty in. making the distinction, for if there is a conclusive presumption that there was jurisdiction, that presumption must exist in one case as well as in the other. The question whether or not the party is estopped, cannot be made to depend upon the greater inconvenience of getting rid of the estoppel in one case than in another.
But aside from this observation as to the effect of the authorities, an examination of them shows that our courts did in fact proceed upon a ground common to both classes of judgments. The reasons are fully stated in the case of
Starbuck
v.
Murray
(
This is but an amplification of what is sometimes more briefly expressed in the books, that Avhere the defence goes to defeat the record, there is no estoppel. That the reasoning of Marcy, J., is applicable to domestic judgments, is also the opinion of the learned annotators to Phillip’s Evidence. (Cowen and Hill’s notes [1st Ed.], p. 801, note 551.) Petering to the opinion of Marcy, J., before cited, they say: “ The same may be said respecting any judgment, sentence or decree. A want of jurisdiction in the court pronouncing it may always be set up when it is sought to be enforced, or when any benefit is claimed under it; and the principle which ordinarily forbids the impeachment or contradiction of a record has no sort of application to the case.” The dicta of our judges are all to the same effect, although the precise case does not seem to have arisen. In
Bigelow
v.
Stearns
(
The General Term, in that case, held that a judgment of the Supreme Court was void for want of service of an attachment, notwithstanding that the record averred that the attachment had been duly served and returned, according to law. The judgment in the case cited was reversed (
In the
Chemung Canal Bank
v.
Judson
(
In
Porter
v.
Bronson
(
It thus appears that the current of judicial opinion in this. State is very strong and uniform in favor of the proposition stated by Jones, J., in
The technical difficulty arising from tile conclusiveness of the record is thus obviated. In the present case, the judgment is set up by the defendants as a bar to the plaintiff’s, action. But it must be borne in mind, that this is an equitable action, being for the foreclosure of a mortgage. The *268 • defendants set up the foreclosure in the McFarquahar case as a bar, but • being in a court of equity, the plaintiff had a right to set up any matter showing that the defendants • ought not in equity to avail themselves of that judgment. They offered to show that it was entered ex parte on forged papers. It does not appear that the plaintiff ever had any knowledge of it, and it is not pretended that he was legally summoned. Such a judgment would never be upheld in ■equity, even in favor of one ignorant of the fraud and claiming bona fide under it. He stands in no better position than any other party claiming bona fide under a forged instrument.
The case is analagous in principle to that of the
Bridgeport Savings Bank
v.
Eldredge
(
It was held, 1. That the decree was not in any proper sense a bar to the present suit, as a judgment at law would be a bar to a suit at law; but that, without impugning the decree, the court could, for equitable reasons shown, allow a further time for redemption.
2. That, therefore, the question whether the plaintiff could contradict the record by showing that no service of the bill was, in fact, made upon him, did not present itself as a technical one, to be determined by the rules with regard to the verity of judicial records, but only in its relation to the plaintiff’s rights to equitable relief, and therefore that evidence of want of notice was admissible.
The bill to redeem was not framed to open the former *269 decree, and contained no allegations adapted to or praying for such relief, but was in the ordinary form of a bill for redemption, taking no notice of the previous decree. The decree was set up in the answer, and it was averred that it was rendered on legal notice to the plaintiff. The court, however, held that this defence might be rebutted by evidence of facts which should preclude defendants from taking advantage of a decree of which they could not conscientiously avail themselves.
Under the system of practice in this State, no reply to an answer setting up new matter is required, but the plaintiff is allowed to rebut it by evidence. Neither is it necessary to anticipate a defence arising upon a deed or record by inserting matter in the complaint in avoidance of it. The defence may never be set up, and the plaintiff is not bound to suppose that it will be. The state of the pleadings, therefore, presents no difficulty. The only question which might be raised is, that McFarquahar, in whose name the decree was obtained, should be before the court, but no such objection was made at the trial, and if it had been, I do not see that he has any interest in the question. All the parties claiming under the decree and sale are parties to this action, and I see no reason why the validity of the McFarquahar foreclosure cannot be tried herein as well as upon a motion or in a separate suit to set aside the decree.
The judgment should be reversed, and a new trial ordered with costs to abide the event.
All concur; Andrews, J., in result.
Judgment reversed.
