39 P. 1100 | Or. | 1895
Opinion by
The admission of this decree in evidence, and the effect given thereto by the court, constitutes the first and an important assignment of error in this case. The objection to its admission is that, as to the parties to this action, it is res inter alios acta, and therefore not competent evidence. The fundamental ruie on this subject undoubtedly is that the record of a judgment or- decree in personam or quasi in rem can affect only parties and privies, — that is, those who have the right to adduce testimony or cross-examine the witnesses introduced by the other side, or who have a right to defend the action or suit, or to appeal from the judgment or decree, or those who claim by mutual succession or relationship to the same rights of prop, erty or subject matter. All other persons are strangers, and the judgment is not binding upon them: Starkie on Evidence (10th ed.), 318; Black on Judgments, §§ 600, 794; 1 Herman on Estoppel, § 299; Freeman on Judgments, § 154; Freeman v. Alderson, 119 U. S. 185 (7 Sup. Ct. 165). It is apparent that under this rule the decree in question was not admissible in evidence to establish Ben Holladay’s interest in the property, nor was it conclusive upon the parties to this action. The plaintiff was an en
The act of eighteen hundred and seventy-eight has been incorporated into Hill’s Code — both the first and second editions — as the following sections, the figures in parenthesis giving the number of the section in the original act, viz., 2992 (1), 2829 (2), 2S70 (3), 2996 (4), 2871 (5), 2872 (6), 31 (7), 2873 (8), 2997 (9), 2874 (10). The act of eighteen hundred and eighty appears as sections 2998 (1) and 2S7S (2). — Repoeteb.