16 Colo. App. 365 | Colo. Ct. App. | 1901
The facts material to this ruling are:
February 8, 1893, The East Side Improvement Company while owner in fee and in possession of certain lots in Malone and Du Bois subdivision, Arapahoe county, Colorado, made an agreement with David R. McCurdy, to convey to .him these lots. McCurdy thereupon assigned this agreement to Clementina McCurdy, who April 8,1893, contracted
The court below for the reason that the court in the lien suit was without jurisdiction of any one of the defendants therein gave judgment canceling the return on the summons, setting aside the decree, the certificate of sale and deed in the lien suit; also the warranty deed from Vote to Emma E. Ward and the Keely trust deed.
Appellants Keely and Ward are the only parties complaining, by this appeal, of the decree below. Was substantial error committed as to them ? They say there was and contend :
1. That the complaint herein is fatally defective in not alleging that a defense existed to the lien suit, that the evidence herein was sufficient in that it failed to establish such defense.
The facts in this case are not within the rule sought to be invoked. A decree was entered subjecting the property of appellees Du Bois and The East Side Improvement Company without jurisdiction of them, and without notice to them their property was sold and deeded away. In a proceeding to set
“ Before a man’s, property is sold and deeded away, he should have an opportunity to pay the debt or redeem the property from sale. This right to redeem is a valuable right, secured by positive statutory enactment; which right, in this case, was denied appellant, and its property sequestered without notice to it. Under these circumstances we believe that courts of equity should grant appropriate relief without inquiry as to the merits of the original claim.” Great West Min. Co. v. Woodmas of Alston Min. Co. et al., 12 Colo. 60; Du Bois v. Clark, 12 Colo. App. 220-232.
In certain cases where the defendant has sustained no prejudice by the judgment, as where the plaintiff has not gone further than to recover only a money judgment against the defendant, the courts have held that such defendant in his petition to set aside the judgment might be required as an earnest of good faith to allege that a defense existed to the original action, but that such allegation, should the court require it, is not traversable. Such is the rule announced in Wilson v. Hawthorne, 14 Colo. 530-534, the court saying:
“ The showing of merits should not be required to the extent of compelling a party against whom a judgment has been obtained, without jurisdiction over his person, to come into a court of equity and assume the burden of disproving his liability. On the contrary, a party' thus circumstanced is entitled to the maintenance of his right to defend against such supposed liability in an action where his adversary must assume the burden of proof. * * * The allegation of merits, though not traversable, may very properly be required as an earnest of good faith from the party seeking relief from a supposed unauthorized judgment; * * * ” See also State Board of Agriculture v. Meyers, 13 Colo. App. 500.
Even were such rule applicable to the facts in the present case, it has been satisfied by the allegations in the complaint. Abstract, folios 17, 18.
Great West Min. Co. v. Woodmas of Alston Min. Co. et al., supra, was a proceeding to set aside a judgment and sales to third parties made thereunder in a proceeding wherein there was no service, or authorized appearance, of defendants in the original action; this involved a contradiction of the return of the sheriff and a vacating of same. The court held that the action would lie.
Wilson v. Hawthorne, supra, was a direct proceeding to set aside a judgment in which it was alleged there had been no service of the summons and no authorized appearance. It was not alleged that the plaintiff in such original proceeding was a party to the legal fraud; it was held that the proceeding would lie.
Du Bois v. Clark, supra, was a proceeding to set aside the return of service and a judgment rendered thereon. The return showed personal service by the sheriff through his undersheriff ; the record also recited the appearance by counsel. The court being satisfied from the evidence that the return was false, such evidence possessing no other requirement than being convincing, granted the relief. It further held that it was not necessary to show misconduct of plaintiff in obtaining the false return. See also Smith v. Morrill, 12 Colo. App. 233.
There was substantial evidence in the court below that no one of the defendants in the lien suit had ever been served with summons, that no one of them had ever appeared, and that no one of them knew of the proceeding until long after the muniments of title hereby assaulted were made and the court so found. By such finding we are concluded.
III. Appellants contend that appellees are guilty of laches
The fact that Vote redeemed the land in question from a tax sale is no defense to this action. Judgment affirmed.
Affirmed.