87 So. 200 | Ala. | 1920
It has now become elementary law that any judgment rendered by the court of a sister state may be collaterally attacked and avoided for want of jurisdiction of subject-matter or person when it is sought to be enforced in a court of any other state. A personal judgment, whether against an individual or a corporation, must be grounded upon jurisdiction of the defendant's person lawfully acquired. Lucas v. Bank of Darien, 2 Stew. 280, 306; Puckett v. Pope,
This was a fundamental principle of the common law. 15 R. C. L. p. 847, § 321. It is now fixed in our jurisprudence by the due process clause of the Fourteenth Amendment to the federal Constitution, as construed by *139 the federal Supreme Court, and cannot be denied by virtue of either the decisions or statutes of a state.
Under the agreed facts exhibited by the record in this case, the service of process from the Florida court on the president of the defendant corporation while temporarily sojourning in Florida did not avail as a personal service upon the corporation, and therefore could not support a personal judgment against it. This has been settled by the highest authority. Riverside Mills v. Menefee,
"We content ourselves with saying that it results from them [the decisions reviewed] that it is indubitably established that the courts of one state may not, without violating the due process clause of the Fourteenth Amendment, render a judgment against a corporation organized under the laws of another state where such corporation has not come into such state for the purpose of doing business therein, or has done no business therein, or has no property therein, or has no qualified agent therein upon whom process may be served, and that the mere fact that an officer of a corporation may temporarily be in the state or even permanently reside therein, if not there for the purpose of transacting business for the corporation or vested with authority by the corporation to transact business in such state, affords no basis for acquiring jurisdiction or escaping the denial of due process under the Fourteenth Amendment which would result from decreeing against the corporation upon a service had upon such an officer under such circumstances."
In the Menefee Case, after the defendant's motion in impeachment of the jurisdiction had been overruled by the trial court, the defendant answered, and there was a trial on the merits followed by a judgment for the plaintiff. The defendant appealed from that judgment to the Supreme Court of North Carolina, insisting upon the invalidity of the service, and from a judgment of that court affirming the action of the trial court the defendant, a Virginia corporation, appealed to the federal Supreme Court. The attack on the North Carolina judgment was made directly by appeal, and in that vital respect that case differs from the case in hand. If in that case no appeal had been taken from the judgment of the trial court, or from the judgment of affirmance in the state Supreme Court, and the question had reached the federal Supreme Court by appeal from the judgment of a Virginia court sustaining the North Carolina judgment against collateral attack, we apprehend that the original judgment would not have been impeached for want of jurisdiction.
And if in the instant case the defendant corporation had confined its appearance in the Florida court to an effort to dismiss the proceeding for want of jurisdiction, and, the judgment being adverse, it had thereupon declined to appear generally and submit the cause for adjudication upon its merits, it seems clear that it could afterwards have successfully impeached any judgment rendered against it by the Florida court when sought to be enforced in the court of another state in a collateral suit.
But, having yielded to the judgment of the Florida court on the question of jurisdiction of its person by appearing and answering to the merits of the complaint, it must, upon sound principle, and we think upon sound authority also, be held to have conclusively waived the original failure in the service of process, and to have become provisionally bound by the judgment thereupon rendered — provisionally, that is, upon its reversal by direct appeal.
The effect of such an appearance and the validity of the judgment rendered thereon on appeal was fully considered by the Supreme Court of North Dakota in Miner v. Francis,
"We hold that a general appearance, after an objection to jurisdiction has been overruled, does not constitute a voluntary appearance, unless the contrary is shown, provided the defendant seeks a review of his objection to the jurisdiction of the court in the very action in which it is made. Of course, it is clear that a defendant may make a voluntary appearance after such an objection is overruled. That it was his purpose to make such an appearance would be conclusively established by his abandoning the point after judgment, by not seeking to review it on appeal. Hence such a judgment would never be vulnerable to collateral attack on the ground that the appearance was not voluntary." (Italics supplied.)
This view was affirmed by express decision in the later case of Parsons v. Venzke,
Upon the question of whether or not a general appearance, after motion or plea to the jurisdiction has been overruled on a special appearance, operates as a waiver of that objection, even on direct appeal, the authorities are numerous and appear to be about evenly divided. 4 Corp. Jur. 1365, § 66; 4 Ann. Cas. 290, note; Henry v. Spitler,
Our case of Roach v. Privett,
"The special plea of the defendant below was an attempt to impeach the judgment sued on, by showing that the nisi prius court which rendered the judgment appealed from, and which had thus merged into the judgment of the Supreme Court, was without jurisdiction; but it disclosed that the defendant had prosecuted the appeal, and submitted himself to the jurisdiction of the appellate tribunal. We concur with the circuit judge that this was fatal to the plea. It showed that the court which rendered the judgment sued on, the only subsisting judgment in the cause, had jurisdiction of the defendant, whatever may have been the fact in this regard as to the primary court. The defendant could not thus invoke the jurisdiction of the appellate court, and speculate on the chances of its favorable action, without being bound and precluded by whatever judgment should be rendered in the exercise of that jurisdiction. If he desired to avoid this result, and at the same time draw in question the jurisdiction of the primary court, his remedy was a writ of error coram vobis, under which it was open to him to show that the trial court had never acquired jurisdiction of his person, either by service of summons or attachment of his property. In that proceeding, upon a proper showing, the judgment below could have been expunged. Such is the course of the common law, which, in the absence of anything to the contrary, we are bound to presume obtains in Tennessee. Stephen's Pl. *119; Day v. Hamburgh, 1 Brown (Pa.) 75. But, as he elected to hazard the rendition of a valid judgment against him, by taking an appeal on a record which did not disclose the jurisdictional infirmity of which he complains, he cannot be heard to object that the judgment thus rendered in a proceeding instituted by him was void because of the absence of service on him in the primary court. The demurrer to the special plea was therefore properly sustained."
There can be no difference in principle between a submission to the jurisdiction of the court by pleading and obtaining a judgment on the merits of the cause and by appealing from a judgment rendered on the merits by default.
Our case of Semple v. Glenn,
We conclude that the circuit court did not err in holding that the judgment sued on was founded upon jurisdiction of the defendant's person, and was not subject to collateral impeachment in this proceeding.
It results that the judgment of the circuit court must be affirmed.
Affirmed.
ANDERSON, C. J., and McCLELLAN and THOMAS, JJ., concur.