8 App. D.C. 430 | D.C. | 1896
delivered the opinion of the Court:
This is a proceeding upon a writ of scire facias to revive judgment; and it is the second time that the case has been before us. In our opinion on the former appeal, 5 App. D. C. 203, the circumstances that gave rise to the proceeding are fully stated, and need not be here repeated. Upon the plea of mil tid record interposed by the appellee William Cunningham, defendant in the court below, and issue joined thereon, and the submission of the cause to the court below upon such issue joined, that court found in favor of the defendant, and thereupon entered judgment in his favor. The plaintiff, who is now again the appellant, then brought the case here by appeal. We there held, in reference to the two questions that were at that time raised before us by the record, 1st, that upon a plea of iml tid record, production in evidence of a record, apparently regular upon its face, is prima fade sufficient to support the plea ; and that defects in the record requiring extrinsic evidence to make them apparent, must be formally alleged before they can be proven ; 2d, that a record, which shows an appearance of a party by attorney under a warrant purporting to have been executed by him authorizing the attorney to appear and confess judgment for him, will bind such party until it is proved that the attorney acted without authority; and, 3d, that the act of Maryland of 1747, ch. 23, prohibiting the courts from entering judgments by confession under warrants of attorney to confess judgments contained in what •were known as judgment bonds, had no application to cases like the present, and must be confined in its operation to the special class of cases for which it was intended, as expressed in the preamble.
The former judgment was thereupon reversed, and the cause remanded for a new trial; and the result of that new trial is now before us for such review as it may be entitled to receive.
It appears that two pleas were interposed in the first in
. ■ This was the condition of the record at. the time of .the former trial, which came before us for review in the appeal heretofore mentioned. The judgment of the court below at that trial was based on the first plea alone, that of nul. tiel record; and as the decision of that court, as then rendered, disposed of the plaintiff’s whole case, trial of the issue upon the second plea became .unnecessary.
, The determination by this court upon the former appeal was virtually a determination of the issue on the plea,of nul. tiel record in favor of the plaintiff But no judgment was directed to be entered in his favor; and with another plea •still pending and undetermined, none could properly be directed or entered. We simply reversed the judgment, and remanded the cause fof a néw trial.
¥/hen, thereafter, 'the cause came on for such' new trial, . the court-directed á.jury to be sworn to try the issues there•in. Whereupon the plaintiff objected that-the issue of nul -tiel. record should' not be tried by a jury, but by the court. • But ..the court overruled the objection; and held that the pleadings taken together presented, an issue of fact to be
The plaintiff then offered in evidence ‘ ‘ the record in the said case from the declaration filed therein to the entry of judgment in his favor in the minutes of said Supreme Court, inclusive; also, the power of attorney to confess said judgment, filed with said record.” The court admitted the record in evidence, but refused to admit the power of attorney, without proof of its execution, the consent of the defendant Cunningham thereto before its execution, and the partnership of Cunningham with Brown. To this refusal of the court the plaintiff also took an exception, and the exception is made the basis of an assignment of error.
The plaintiff then undertook to prove the execution of the power of attorney in question, upon which, as is apparent both from our former opinion and the present, practically depends the determination of this whole controversy.
In order to prove a partnership between the two men, Brown and Cunningham, by whom or on behalf of whom the power of attorney purported to have been executed, the plaintiff offered in evidence a mortgage given by them In their individual names to secure the payment of the purchase money of the canal boat “ F. L. Moore,” out of the employment of which these proceedings had their origin ; and this proof was rejected by the court. The mortgage does not appear in the record; nor does it appear what its recitals were. Another mortgage on the boat, similarly executed, to secure payment for a boiler, arid engine furnished to it, was also offered, and similarly refused.
Then the plaintiff offered the oral testimony of Brown, one of the original defendants to the suit, who testified that the signature, " Brown and Cunningham,” affixed to the power of attorney, was in his (Brqvvn’s) handwriting and attached by him ; that a short time before the execution of that paper, Cunningham had told witness that he would have nothing more to do with the boat; that he (Brown)
Thereupon the plaintiff seems to have again offered the power of attorney ; and it was again refused to be admitted, on the ground of the insufficiency of the proof. To this ruling the plaintiff excepted, and then rested his case.
The defendant, without offering any testimony, thereupon moved the court for an instruction to the jury to return their verdict for the defendant, which instruction the court gave ; and the verdict was accordingly so returned on all the issues joined, and judgment ivas rendered thereon, from which the. plaintiff has appealed to this-court.
1. The first assignment of error is based upon the overruling by the court below of the plaintiff’s demurrer to the defendant’s amended second plea. But this assignment is plainly untenable. It is well-settled law, that when a party pleads over, after a demurrer is overruled, that demurrer passes out of the case, and can have no place in the review of the cause in an appellate tribunal. Campbell v. Wilcox, 10 Wall. 421; Aurora v. West, 7 Wall. 82; Stanton v. Embry, 93 U. S. 548. An exception to this rule apparently is when the declaration plainly fails to state a cause of action, and the defect is such as might be availed of on motion in arrest of judgment, in which case a party may plead over and go to trial, without losing his right to have the judgment upon the verdict overruled for an error in overruling a demurrer to the declaration. Teal v. Walker, 111 U. S. 242. But
2. In the second place, if there was error, as claimed by the appellant, in the submission to the jury by the court below' of the issue on the plea of nul tid record, together with the other issue evolved in the case, it is not apparent that this error has prejudiced the appellant. The decision of the issue, after all, w'as a decision by the court; for the
3.' After all, the substantial question in this cáse, as we . have already intimated, is whether for the purposes of this suit the appellee is bound by the power of attorney to confess judgment given in the case, confessedly not signed or executed by himself, and not shown in any manner to have been done with- his knowledge or consent, but with which it is sought to charge him solely and exclusively on'the ground that at the time of its execution, or prior thereto, he had been in partnership with the person who actually executed.the paper, and who assumed.to execute it for the appellee as well as for himself, under a designation purporting to be a partnership designation.
It may be that it was not incumbent on the appellant to prove that the power of attorney in. question was author
Nov,', it is perfectly well settled that, after the dissolution of a partnership, one of the partners cannot bind the others or the partnership property by a warrant or power of attorney to confess judgment, or by an appearance to a suit, or by an acknowledgment of an indebtedness, or by any new undertaking or liability of any kind. Indeed, it is perfectly well settled that, even during the existence of a partnership, one partner cannot confess judgment so as to bind his copartners. Hall v. Lanning, 91 U. S. 160; Clark v. Bowen, 22 How. 270; Bell v. Morrison, 1 Pet. 351; Karthaus v. Ferrer, 1 Pet. 222; Story on Partnership, sec. 114. Parsons on Partnership, sec. 179. Therefore, even if these parties were actually partners, as claimed by the appellant, there was no power by virtue of such partner-ship in the one to bind the other by a confession of judgment, or by a warrant to an attorney to confess judgment for the partnership. For, of course, if one partner cannot confess judgment against the partnership so as to bind his copartners, he cannot authorize an attorney to do so. For no man can give a power which he does not himself possess.
4. The contention of the appellant in the present case is based exclusively upon the theory that Brown and Cunningham were partners, and that, by virtue of such partnership, Brown had the implied authority to execute the povver of attorney to confess judgment, upon which alone the judgment against the appellee is based. It is, as we have seen, the rule laid down by the Supreme Court of the United States, and practically by all the authorities, that partners have no such inherent or implied powers; and as
5. It is argued further, on behalf of the appellant, that ' if, notwithstanding the original invalidity or irregularity of the judgmenivihe-appellee subsequently ratified it, he would now be bound by it. But there is no proof whatever of any kind to show- subsequent ratification of the judgment in this instance by the appellee; nor is there anything in the record before us to show that the appellee even knew anything of the judgment before the time of the issue of the writ of scire facias. The only ground on which it is sought to base this theory of ratification is, that the appel-lee failed for eighteen months to object to the judgment. We are not aware of any statute or of any rule of law that provides a limitation of eighteen months, or any limitation whatever, in such cases. It would be an absurdity to suppose that a person, against whom a judgment has been rendered without any service of process whatever, could be precluded by any lapse of time from contesting its validity. Even though he has become aware of its existence, there is no rule of law or of reason that requires him to take any action for its annulment. He may wait until it is sought to be enforced against him. This is. a position so well settled that it would be useless to enlarge upon it, or to cite authorities in its support.
We do not find any error in the record of this case ; and we must, therefore, affirm the judgment of the court below, with costs, and it is so ordered.