73 Tenn. 395 | Tenn. | 1880
delivered the opinion of the court.
On the 30th of January, 1872, defendants obtained judgment against complainant for $293.50. This judgment was rendered, on confession, by one Burrow, an acting justice of the peace of Carter county, whose wife was a niece of Hilton. A warrant was issued by said Burrow on the case, returnable before himself •or some other justice, service of which was acknowledged by Hilton on the 30th of January, 1872; and on the same day, and in the same entry of acknowledgment of service, he confessed judgment before said Burrow for $293.50, in writing, signed by him, whereupon judgment for that sum was entered by the justice upon the warrant. Upon this judgment execution was issued and levied upon a house and lot, and the papers having been returned into the circuit court of said county, the house and lot were ordered to be sold, and were sold, plaintiff in the execution becoming the purchaser. After the time of redemption had expired, Hilton surrendered possession to the purchasers, they having taken a sheriff’s deed for the property, and from that time until the filing of the bill in this case (January, 1879) Miller & Co. have remained in the undisturbed possession of the property.
The bill is filed to have declared void the judgment and subsequent proceedings had thereon, upon the ground that the justice who rendered the judgment had no jurisdiction to do so, because of the relationship of his wife to the complainant against whom the judgment was rendered.
And when a party appears before a justice incompetent to try his case because of kinship, and agrees and does confess judgment before him, in writing, he necessarily waives objection to the rendition of such judgment and to the incompetency of the justice, who is thus authorized to render the judgment against him.
The Code provides that any debtor may confess judgment before any justice of the peace having juris
The justice of the debt is not contested in this case, and the judgment has remained unquestioned and unimpeached for about seven years, with full knowledge of the facts upon which it .is now sought to avoid it.
The chancellor dismissed the bill, and we affirm his decree with costs.