84 N.C. 221 | N.C. | 1881
The court allowed the motion and the plaintiff appealed. Upon the evidence the court finds that the defendant, John A. Guion, who moves to set aside the judgment recovered by the plaintiff against himself and others at fall term, 1863, of the superior court of law of Jones, as to himself, was not served with process, nor had he any notice of the institution of the suit or of the rendition of the judgment until the month of November, 1879. The motion is opposed by the plaintiff upon the two-fold ground that the defendant war represented by counsel in the original action, and that, upon notice and after hearing evidence, the clerk, prior to the present application, gave the plaintiff leave to sue out execution upon his dormant judgment, thereby concluding him from impeaching its validity for irregularity or other cause. The legal sufficiency of these objections, which were overruled in the court below, is presented in the appeal.
The distinction between erroneous and irregular judgments, and between such as are voidable, is thus clearly *223
traced by READE, J: "An erroneous judgment is one rendered according to the course and practice of the courts, but contrary to law; as where it is for one party, when it ought to be for another, or for too little or too much. An irregular judgment is one contrary to the course and practice of the court, as a judgment without service of process." Wolfe v. Davis,
The concluding words of the first citation are qualified and explained in the more explicit statement of the doctrine in the latter. The rule governs when applied to the record of a judicial proceeding in the same state, but it is held that when offered in evidence in an action pending in a tribunal of a different state, it may be shown by parol that the attorney named in the record, and appearing for a party, never had authority to do so, and that not withstanding the recital he is not bound thereby. This Mr. WEEKS says may be considered settled, and as not contravening that portion of the federal constitution which declares that "full faith and credit shall be given in each state to the public acts, records and judicial proceedings of every other state." Constitution, Art. 4, § 1; Weeks on Attorneys, 358.
The supreme court of the United States have extended the doctrine to the record of a circuit court, produced as evidence in an action in a circuit court in another state, and *224 permitted the want of authority of an attorney professing to act for a party to be proved in order to defeat its otherwise conclusive effect. Hillv. Mendenhall, 21 Wallace, 163.
The judge does not himself ascertain the facts in reference to the alleged representation of the defendant by attorney, but annexes a transcript of the docket in which the cause is entered, leaving to us to interpret its meaning and effect. From this it appears that on the appearance docket where the cause is stated, the initials "J. F. W." are written against the defendant's name. And this memorandum is found in the space intended for the abstract of the pleas or defence: "Butler pleads specially the late stay act of the general assembly. The defendant D. M. Butler craves until the next term of this court to plead."
At fall term, 1863, the name G. C. Woodley, substituted in place of the initials, appears against the names of the defendants, and the further entry: "Judgment final by default according to specialty filed for principal due 1st September, 1860, $1,506, interest to November 2d 1863, $286.14 and costs." No actual defence seems to have been made on behalf of the complaining defendant, although, as His Honor finds, the draft, the subject matter of the suit had been paid by the payee to the defendant, his endorsee, and the payee had afterwards fraudulently transferred it to the plaintiff, without cancelling the names of the succeeding endorsees.
We cannot regard this loose and imperfect record as concluding the defendant against any claim for relief, even upon the strictest rules which have been recognized as governing in cases of unauthorized appearances of counsel, when no process has been served, and no subsequent ascent had been given, or can reasonably be implied, as collected in University v.Lassiter,
It is further contended for the appellant that the action of the clerk in awarding execution was an adjudication sustaining the judgment and estopping the defendant from now assailing its regularity and legal force. This position would be entirely correct if it was now proposed to set up any defences relied on, or which could have been and ought to have been set up in opposition to the motion for leave to issue execution. This is fully settled by the case cited by the counsel (Sanderson v. Daily,
It must therefore be declared, that there is no error and the judgment is affirmed.
No error. Affirmed.