254 N.W. 605 | Minn. | 1934
Lead Opinion
Charles S. Murray, a resident of St. Louis county, died intestate in 1925. His estate was probated in that county and the administrator appointed on the petition of Emma Frances Walrath, claiming to be a half sister of the deceased. In April, 1927, there was a decree of partial distribution which determined that Mrs. Walrath, William Fenlon Calkins, Edwin Walter Dykeman, and Clara Dykeman Cook were the heirs. On appeal to the district court that decree was affirmed. The final decree of distribution was made in March, 1929, and the estate assigned to the distributees who had been determined by the decree of partial distribution to be the heirs. The estate has a value of upwards of $300,000. The inheritance tax of more than $23,000 was paid before distribution. The defendants here are the distributees of the estate except that Emma Frances Walrath has also departed this life, and defendants Bertha and Orlando Walrath, respectively her daughter and husband, are joined in her stead. *462
The foregoing facts appear without contradiction from the pleadings. Plaintiffs claim to be the heirs of the deceased Charles S. Murray to the exclusion of all others. They want a judgment annulling the partial and final decrees of distribution of the Murray estate and declaring them to be the owners of the property distributed under the decrees. First and last, there have been three sets of claimants to the estate. Those of the first were successful and are the distributees under the decrees of the probate court. The second group unsuccessfully attacked those judgments in a direct action to have them vacated for the same alleged perjury and fraud charged here. That action was finally disposed of by the decision in Murray v. Calkins,
1. There is no merit in the argument that vacation of the decrees of distribution is not prerequisite to the success of plaintiffs' attempt to recover the property. The administration of the Murray estate by the probate court was a proceedingin rem. It is not and cannot be denied that from the beginning the court had jurisdiction of the res. In re Estate of Eklund,
The statement in Leighton v. Bruce,
2. Plaintiffs charge in most general language a conspiracy by the distributees of the Murray estate wrongfully to obtain it. The only detail averred is that Calkins testified in the probate court that he was half brother to the deceased and, with Emma Frances Walrath, Edwin Walter Dykeman, and Clara Dykeman Cook, also half brother and sisters, the sole heirs. That "testimony" is charged to have been wilfully "false and fraudulent" and that as a result the decrees of distribution were made. In numerous cases, from Hass v. Billings,
"Where the unsuccessful party has been prevented from exhibiting fully his case, by fraud or deception practiced on him by his opponent, as by keeping him away from court, [or by] a false offer of a compromise; or where the defendant never had knowledge of the *464
suit, being kept in ignorance by the acts of the plaintiff; or where an attorney fraudulently or without authority assumes to represent a party and connives at his defeat; or where the attorney regularly employed corruptly sells out his client's interests to the other side — these, and similar cases which show that there has never been a real contest in the trial or hearing of the case, are reasons for which a new suit may be sustained to set aside and annul the former judgment or decree, and open the case for a new trial and a fair hearing." 6 Pomeroy, Equity Jurisprudence (3 ed.) § 649, quoting from U.S. v. Throckmorton,
We know from the pleadings that there was here a very real contest and a fair, extended, and stubbornly contested "hearing" antecedent to the judgment. True, the contest was waged in the probate and district courts between the first two sets of claimants, but the issue of heirship was the thing long and hotly contested. In the district court these plaintiffs attempted to intervene and were denied the privilege because of the insufficiency of their showing of any real claim of heirship. The order denying the application for leave to intervene was appealable, because final. Richter v. Merchants Nat. Bank,
Judgments are not lightly to be set aside. Their whole function, aside from affording relief, is to put controversies at rest as against *465
all the parties. In proceedings in rem they determine finally such issues as status and title against all the world. If the argument for plaintiffs were valid and they could reopen the matter, they could but relitigate the issues of heirship already settled by judgment. If worsted upon the trial of that issue, simply because their testimony was successfully opposed by that for the original claimants, they might again attack the resulting judgment upon the ground of perjury, and so on adinfinitum. Hass v. Billings,
3. Attempt is made to justify the action under 2 Mason Minn. St. 1927, § 9405, authorizing an action to set aside a judgment obtained by "perjury, subornation of perjury, or any fraudulent act, practice, or representation of the prevailing party" provided the action is brought within three years after discovery by the aggrieved party of the fraud. This action was not brought within three years after plaintiffs knew all about what was going on in the probate court of St. Louis county. They seek to escape an adverse holding on that ground by considering the statute merely as one of limitation, and so of no avail to defendants because not pleaded. That is an erroneous view. The period fixed by the statute is not strictly a limitation of remedy. It makes action within the time fixed a condition precedent to relief. The law is that when a statute creates a new liability or an action "unknown to the common law, and fixes the time within which that action may be commenced, it is not a statute of limitation," but rather one of creation. Hence commencement of the action within the time fixed "is an indispensable condition of the liability and of the action which it permits." Partee v. St. Louis S. F. R. Co. (C.C.A.) 204 F. 970, 972, 51 L.R.A. (N.S.) 721; Bomar v. Hagler,
Much argument has been devoted to this dictum from Murray v. Calkins,
"Plaintiffs have made certain alleged cousins of theirs parties defendant herein, alleging that they are heirs of Charles S. Murray; and they insist that their rights must be adjudicated. These alleged relatives were not parties to the litigation in the probate court nor in the appeal to the district court wherein the judgment attacked was rendered and do not come within the class authorized to bring an action under § 9405. Stewart v. Duncan,
The "alleged cousins," the "parties defendant" so referred to, are the plaintiffs in this case. They were not parties to the appeal to this court in Murray v. Calkins,
Judgment affirmed.
Concurrence Opinion
I concur on the ground, first, that plaintiffs failed to bring their action within the three-year limitation period fixed by the statute; second, on the ground that, if entitled to any relief, their remedy was by application to the probate court to have its final decree reopened, within one year after notice or knowledge thereof.