Marshall's Adm'r v. Cheatham

88 Va. 31 | Va. | 1891

Fauntleroy, J.,

delivered the opinion of the-court.

*32It is shown by the record, that on the 11th day of November, 1863, A. H. Love and Ií. H. Love executed and delivered to John J. Parrish, administrator of W. J. Marshall, deceased, their bond under seal, in words and figures following, viz.:

$810.00. “Lunenburg, Nov. 11th, 1863.

Six months after date, we promise to pay John J. Parrish, administrator of William J. Marshall, deceased, the sum of eight hundred and ten dollars, current money of Virginia, for value received. Given under our hands and seals this date above.

A. H. Love, [Seal.]

' H. H. Love, [Seal.]

Suit was instituted on this said bond, and at the April term, 1867, of the circuit court of Lunenburg, there was judgment by default thereon in favor of the said Parrish, administrator of AV. J. Marshall, deceased, for the full amount of the said bond, viz.: $810.00, with interest from May 11th, 1864, and $7.42 costs, against the said A. H. Love and EL H. Love, ■which said judgment was duly docketed in the said clerk’s office in April, 1864.

In 1871, the said H. EL Love having died, Thomas Cheatham instituted a creditor’s suit for himself and others, against the executors of the said EL II. Love, deceased, and his widow and children, to ascertain the debts against the estate of the said H. EL Love, deceased, and their order of priority, the assets— real and personal — and to settle the estate accounts of his executors, and to enforce payment of his debts.

Pending this suit, the powers- of the executors of EL EL Love, deceased, were revoked, and the estate wras committed to J. W. Ellis, as sheriff, administrator de bonis 'nón; and on the 13th of May, 1872, there was a decree for an account and a reference to a master commissioner in the cause. Under *33the said decree, H. E. .Boswell, commissioner, gave notice by personal service to the parties named in the proceedings, plaintiffs and defendants; and he states in his report that be published notice in the “ South,side Sentinel,” a newspaper printed at Burkeville, in Nottoway county; but there is no proof of this, nor is there any order for notice by publication. Parrish, administrator of ~W. J. Marshall, was not a party to the suit. The commissioner, Boswell, returned his report November 15th, 1872, in which he reported this judgment from the record as a debt of the first class, as for $810.00, with interest and costs as aforesaid; but he, of his oum motion, scaled it. at twenty-two. for one, as a Confederate transaction, thus reducing the debt ascertained by the judgment from $810.00 to $36.84, with interest and costs. On the 17th of [November, 1875, the court rendered a decree confirming the said report of Commissioner Boswell, and approving the scaling of the said debt ascertained by the said judgment, and for payment of the amount as sealed.

Parrish, administrator of W. J. Marshall, deceased, who was-not a party to the suit, filed his petition, in which he deposes that he was utterly ignorant of the said suit, and of all the proceedings therein, until 1885, and prays to have the said confirmation of the said report of Commissioner Boswell and the scaling of the said judgment set. aside. And, by leave, he amended his petition, asking to be allowed to prove his judgment. J. "W. Ellis, sheriff administrator d. b. v. of IT. H. Love, deceased, answered both the original and amended petitions. The court by its decree refused the prayers of Parrish in both petitions, and refused to set aside the confirmation of the report of Boswell, commissioner, and decreed that the scaling of Parrish’s judgment was proper, and should stand.

Erom this decree Parrish has appealed. The only question for this court to pass upon, presented by the record, is, "Was the scaling of appellant’s judgment by the commissioner a valid *34act. which he was authorized to do, or was it simply void ? We are of opinion that it was unauthorized, invalid and void. A judgment in an action of debt by a competent court is a judicial ascertainment of the debt demanded, or of so much thereof as is set out in the judgment. It. is a final adjudication which no court or officer can go behind or set aside or change, except by procedure prescribed by rules of law or equity, and by those only who are by said rules and methods invested with jurisdiction so to do. A commissioner taking accounts should take evidence, and inquire as to unascertained open accounts and other debts; hut lie has no authority or power to make any change in a judgment, nor to make any alteration or abatement in it for reasons or causes arising at or prior to its rendition. His duty is to take the judgment u.<j recorded, and to report it. If there be legal evidence of payments on it since its rendition, he cannot, even then, reduce the said recorded judgment by the said subsequent payments without notice to the owner of the said judgment. There is but one statutory provision by which any debt can he scaled as a Confederate transaction, and that is found in the first and second section of chapter 71, page 185, Acts of 1865 — ’6, enacted March 3d, 1866, which act provides only for setting up the fact of Confederate transaction by defence to a suit while pending and before judgment, so as to reduce the judgment to he rendered. If no such defence be made and judgment be rendered for full amount of the face of the obligation, the defence of “ Confederate transaction ” cannot be made afterwards.

It is true that the third section of the said act of March 3d, 1866, attempts to give a remedy by the court, on motion, after ten days’ notice. If this were law it would not give the power to a commissioner, nor validate the act of Commissioner Boswell. The remedy is extraordinary and statutory, and the statute must be strictly, followed. But even this remedy is not law. The third section of the act of March 3d, 1866, was amended and re-enacted by the act of March 25th, 1873, chap*35ter 219, page 197, Acts of 1872-’3. The amendment makes no change in the language of the amended section, but adopts it, word for word, with an addition which, in no degree, changes its character. But this court, in the case of Ratcliffe v. Anderson, 31 Gratt. 105, in an elaborate opinion delivered by Judge Christian, decided that this amended statute is unconstitutional, upon grounds including the original section and holding it as objectionable, unconstitutional, and void as that of March 25tli, 1873. And the case of Marpole v. Cather, 78 Va. 239, approves this decision in the opinion delivered by judge. These cases settle the law of this case, which comes wholly within their terms and ruling. The appellant’s judgment duly obtained and recorded in 1867, could not be scaled by the unauthorized, ex mero mota act of the commissioner in 1872, and that, too, without notice to the owner of the judgment, and in a report in a cause to which he was not a party. He could not go behind the judgment in favor of Parrish, nor abate it, nor inqxiire into the kind or character of the transaction. The Code of 1873, chapter 177, provides for corrections of mistakes, errors in calculations, and misreeitals, and that only within five years after the date of the judgment; and it cannot, apply to the scaling of a judgment upon a ground which would have been an admissible defence under the special law for Confederate transactions if set up before the judgment, but which was not so set up or pleaded.

It is plain from the record that Parrish had no notice or knowledge of the suit of Cheatham, nor of the proceedings in it. He accounts for his delay. It is not objected to by any one or in any form, that the judgment is reported as a debt of the first class. It was so reported in 1872, and this would preclude the issue of any execution' after that, and repels any operation of the statute of limitations. (See 18 Gratt. 705, and 78 Va. 962.)

The circuit court erred in confirming the act of Commissioner Boswell scaling the judgment., which was not a claim to *36be proved, but the record of which proved itself. The question of scaling could have been raised only on the trial of the action of debt on the bond. It cannot be raised after the adjudication. The appellant is entitled to have his judgment enforced as first lien for $810, with interest from May 11th, 1864, and the costs, and to recover his costs in the circuit court and in this court. The decree appealed from is wholly erroneous, and must be reversed and annulled.

Richardson, J. and Hinton, J., dissented.

Decree reversed.

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