64 Minn. 531 | Minn. | 1896
Lead Opinion
The plaintiff herein is the assignee of .the Elmo Park Company, and is in possession of, and claiming title to, 740.33 acres-of land situate in Washington county, in this state, and this action is brought to determine the adverse claims of the defendants.
The Iowa Land Company, defendant, claims title through the foreclosure of a certain mortgage executed by the Elmo Park Company to the St. Paul Trust Company, trustee of said land company, defendant, covering the said 740.33 acres. Subsequent to the execution and recording of the mortgage, the defendant Grant, under a c'ontract with the Elmo Park Company, constructed three buildings
The St. Paul Trust Company appeared therein, and filed its answers to the several suits in the office of the clerk of the court of Washington county, and at the same time filed three notices of lis pendens in the office of the register of deeds of said county. These answers were never served upon the Elmo Park Company, unless such filing of them with the clerk constituted service. In these answers, the St. Paul Trust .Company claimed a prior lien to the said mechanic’s liens, and also that default had been made in the payment of the sum secured by said mortgage; and it demanded judgment for the amount due on said mortgage debt, and for a foreclosure of said mortgage and a sale of the whole 740.33 acres, and for a personal judgment against the Elmo Park Company for any deficiency. It does not appear that the Elmo Park Company ever had any notice of the contents of these answers. Subsequently, these three actions were consolidated and tried as one action, and a judgment entered
On August 19, 1892, the attorney for the St. Paul Trust Company made affidavits setting forth that said Elmo Park Company asserted
Subsequently, the whole 740.33 acres was sold under said judgment to the Iowa Land Company, and a deficiency judgment for a large amount was entered and docketed against the Elmo Park Company. This action was brought before the time for redemption expired under said sale. The 40-acre tract described in the lien actions is entirely surrounded by other land described in the mortgage or trust deed, but this mortgage or trust deed also described and covered other independent and distinct tracts of land not connected or used with the 40-acre tract, and leased by the Elmo Park Company to other persons, and by them, at the time of the commencement of the three lien actions, used, and since that time by them used and cultivated, as farm lands.
The important question to be determined is whether a mortgage covering several separate and distinct tracts of land can be foreclosed as to all of the mortgaged property, where a mechanic’s lien holder brings an action'to foreclose his lien upon one of these separate tracts, asking no other relief in his complaint, and makes the mortgagor a party to such action, and where such mortgagor does not appear, but the mortgagee does appear, and files an answer in the office of the clerk of the district court, as provided in G-. S. 1894, § 6238, relative to the enforcement of mechanic’s liens, and in such answer prays for a foreclosure of the mortgage upon all of the premises described in the complaint; the mortgagor having no actual notice of the relief demanded in the complaint, and no constructive notice unless such filing so operates.
If the question was merely whether a mortgagee of the premises upon which the mechanic’s lien is claimed can be made a party, for
It may not be successfully asserted that, when these statutory proceedings to enforce the foreclosure of mechanic’s liens have once been properly started in motion, any rules applicable to the usual course of law or equity cannot be invoked to aid in their successful final determination. But, because the court has judicial power to start the proceedings in motion, it does not necessarily follow that it has jurisdiction to draw into.that proceeding a right to adjudicate upon the question of mortgage liens upon other separate and distinct pieces of land, not covered by the mechanic’s lien-claim, and especially not described in the complaint, nor embraced within the relief therein demanded. The owner of the premises may properly be made a party, in order to have his interest in the premises adjudicated. But the plaintiff in such action has no right to bring in the owner of the premises, and invoke the jurisdiction of the court in respect to any other tract of land than the one affected by the mechanic’s lien. When the complaint in this action was filed, and the Elmo Park Company served with notice to appear and answer, it related only to the 40-acre tract described in the complaint. The premises therein described were the subject-matter concerning which the ac
What was the legal effect of the St. Paul Trust Company filing its answer in the office of the clerk of the district court, without serving it upon its co-defendant, the assignor of plaintiff in this action, and without giving it any notice of the pendency of any such proceedings? It is quite obvious that the lienholder only claimed that a certain sum was due him for work and material, for which he claimed a lien upon the building and 40 acres described in the complaint, and demanded the sale thereof to satisfy his demand; and that as between him and the mortgagee, whom he made a party to the suit, he claimed that his liens upon this particular 40 acres were prior and superior to the lien of the mortgage. It did not concern the plaintiff whether there were other parcels of land covered by the mortgage, and he therefore tendered no issue in regard to outside premises. It is true, he made the Elmo Park Company a defendant, not, however, for the purpose of taking hold of property unaffected by his mechanic’s lien, but because it was the owner of the specific piece of property directly affected by it. It did not, however, dispute the plaintiff’s right of lien, or the right to enforce it against the premises described, for the amount claimed; and so far it had a right to rely upon the plaintiff’s further proceeding according to the issue tendered in his complaint. The St. Paul Trust Company, also defendant, filed its answer, as above stated, not merely as to the plaintiff and the piece of property affected by the complaint, but demanded other and further relief against its co-defendant.
The provisions of the mechanic’s lien law for filing, instead of serving, pleadings, apply only to issues tendered by the complaint or expressly authorized by the statute, and not to pleadings in the nature of cross bills, setting up matters outside of and foreign to such issues. It would be relevant or pertinent for the defendant to set forth in such answer that there were other liens, by mortgage or otherwise, on the specified premises, or that he had other interests or rights in the property which would be affected by the plaintiff’s lien action, and thus have the rights of the parties therein adjusted; but defend
Ordinarily, a cross bill grows out of the matters alleged in the original bill or complaint, and is used to bring the whole dispute before the court, and usually it raises new issues which may present matters arising between co-defendants, but which are not shown by the original bill or complaint. Id. § 433. This is what was attempted in this case by the St. Paul Trust Company simply filing an answer, as required by the mechanic’s lien law, which did not make it operate as a cross bill against its co-defendant, the Elmo Park Company, as to the subject-matter not embraced in the original complaint. Frequently a cross bill is used as a matter of defense only; and if we treat the answer filed by the St. Paul Trust Company as a cross bill, and assume that it may be used for giving affirmative relief beyond what could be afforded if confined to issues raised upon matters stated in the complaint, we must not lose sight of essential principles, one of which is that, when relief is sought by a pleading which operates as a new and original one, no one shall be personally bound until he has had his day in court, by which is meant until he has been duly cited to appear, and has been given an opportunity to be heard. "Judgment without such citation and opportunity wants all the attributes of a judicial determination. It is judicial usurpation and oppression, and can never be upheld where justice is justly administered.” Galpin v. Page, 18 Wall. 350, 369.
It is claimed that Elmo Park Company had its day in court. True, it had it for one purpose, but the judgment was entered for another. It was cited to meet the charge of a mechanic’s lien on 40 acres of land, and the judgment rendered sought to divest it of all its equity in the several hundred acres of mortgaged land, and to bind it by a personal judgment for a deficiency. And this judgment was based upon an alleged statutory contrivance for getting it into court in special cases, instead of the broad constitutional grounds that it should be brought into court only by due process of law. The record shows that, after it was served with the summons in the mechanic’s
In Smith v. Woolfolk, 115 U. S. 143,
“It is settled that one defendant cannot have a decree against a co-defendant without a cross bill, with proper prayer, and process or' answer a.s in an original suit. Walker v. Byers, 14 Ark. 246; Gantt’s Dig. § 4559; Cullum v. Erwin, 4 Ala. 452; Cummins v. Gill, 6 Ala. 562; Shelby v. Smith, 2 A. K. Marshall, 504. It follows, from the reason of this rule, that if one complainant can, under any circumstances, have a decree against another upon a supplemental or amended bill, it must be upon notice to the latter. After a decree disposing of the issues and in accordance with the prayer of a bill has been made, it is not competent for one of the parties, without a service of new process or appearance, to institute further proceedings, on new issues and for new objects, although connected with the subject-matter of the original litigation, by merely giving the new proceedings the title of the original cause. If his bill begins a new litigation, the parties against whom he seeks relief are entitled to notice thereof, and without it they will not be bound; for the decree of a court rendered against a party who has not been heard, and has had no chance to be heard, is not a judicial determination of his rights,, and is not entitled to respect in any other court.”
Assuming, then, that it is the settled law that one defendant cannot have á decree or judgment against a co-defendant without proper-prayer for relief and process or answer as in an original suit, so that such co-defendant had a chance to be heard, we come to the serious, question of whether the judgment or decree in this case can be attacked collaterally. Collateral attacks upon judicial proceedings should not be encouraged, because, if successful, the tendency is generally to bring courts into disrepute, and property rights thereby often become wrested from innocent purchasers. But jurisdiction of the courts over the person and subject-matter is too essential to be disregarded, and, where either is wanting, it is a duty resting upon courts to fix the rights of the parties if they have the power to do
Now, what is the record in this action as to the former foreclosure proceedings, wherein plaintiff herein is sought to be bound, and its right to attack such proceedings collaterally is denied? By stipulation of the respective parties, the trial court in this action found the following facts, which must be deemed true, and to which no objections are made, viz.:
“That the answers of the defendant St. Paul Trust Company in each of the three mechanic’s lien actions referred to in said findings and judgment were never served upon any of the other defendants in said three mechanic’s lien actions, but that the same were filed in the clerk’s office of this court, in each of said three actions, on the 28th day of October, 1891; that the defendant Elmo Park Company never appeared in the said three mechanic’s lien actions, or took any part in the proceedings therein; nor did said Elmo Park Company appear or participate in the said proceedings had in the said three actions after the same were consolidated, in which the order of September 32, 1892, was entered, directing that the judgment in said consolidated action should stand and remain without modification or change, and that the real estate therein described should be sold as therein ordered.”
The record was not one where, by reason of its mere silence, a conclusive presumption would arise as to the regularity of all proceedings necessary to confer jurisdiction upon the trial court, and therefore not impeachable collaterally. This finding forms the very groundwork for impeaching the judgment, within the rales of law which we have already stated, viz. that plaintiff was entitled to notice of the cross complaint, and, in default thereof, was entitled to rely upon these principles of law, and not bound to take notice of any proceedings under such complaint. Hence the court was without
We have not overlooked the effect suggested by filing the lis pen-dens, and the fact that the plaintiff herein was, after the rendition of the judgment in the former action, cited to show cause why it should not be bound by it and the proceeding had thereon. The office of a lis pendens is merely to charge subsequent purchasers with notice of the pendency of the action. Neither can a void judgment be validated by citing the party against whom it is entered to show cause why it should not be declared valid.
Judgment reversed.
On April 20, 1892.
At page 148.
Concurrence Opinion
I concur in the result, but not in all that is said. There are many cases in which a cross bill might be filed without notice to the parties to be affected by it; and while the relief granted on such cross proceeding would be irregular, and subject to be set aside on motion or appeal, it would not be void for want of jurisdiction, and could not be impeached collaterally. If the matters brought in by the cross bill were germane to the matters already in litigation, this would undoubtedly be the effect of filing the cross.bill, and proceeding thereon without notice. But in the present case the matters brought in by the cross bill were clearly not germane to the matters already in litigation, but wholly foreign to them, so far, at least, as concerns the rest of the land except the 40 acres on which the houses were built, and as to the rest of the land except this 40 acres I am clearly of the opinion that the proceedings on the cross bill were absolutely void, and, as they appear on their face to be void, they can be impeached collaterally for want of jurisdiction.