delivered the opinion of the court.
This is an action upon a judgment rendered in one of the courts of Ohio, and the question to be considered is whether the final judgment under review gave to' the proceedings in the Ohio court such faith and credit as are required by the Constitution and laws of the United States.
The Constitution, Art. IV, § 1, provides that “Full faith *260 and credit shall be given in each State to the public acts, records and judicial proceedings of every other State. And the Congress may by general laws prescribe the manner in which such acts, records and proceedings shall be proved, and the effect thereof.” The statute enacted in execution of that power, Rev. Stat. § 905, provides for the authentication of the records and judicial proceedings of the several States and Territories and any country subject to the jurisdiction of the United States, and declares that "the said records and judicial proceedings, so authenticated, shall have such faith and credit given to them in every court within the United States as they have by law or usage in the courts of the State from which they are taken.”
The Wiley Construction Company, a Massachusetts corporation, and Wiley, the defendant in error, executed and delivered to the National Exchange Bank, the plaintiff in error, a written instrument — being a note with warrant of attorney annexed — dated Tiffin, Ohio, April 26, 1884, in which for value received they jointly and severally promised to pay to that bank, or order, on the 'first day of October, 1884, at its office in that city, ten thousand dollars with eight per cent interest after maturity. The instrument authorized N. L. Brewer, or a.ny attorney at law in the United States, or elsewhere, to appear before any court of record, after such obligation became due, waive the issuing and service of process, and confess judgment against the obligors or either of them " in favor of the holder ” for the amount then appearing to be due, together with the cost of suit; and thereupon to release áll errors and writs of errors, and in behalf of the obligors or either of them waive all right to appeal and stay of execution.
On the thirty-first day of July, 1899, nearly - fifteen years after the maturity of the note, the National Exchange Bank instituted suit against both obligors in the court of Common Pleas of Seneca County, Ohio — a court of general jurisdiction in that State — to recover the balance due on that obligation, which was alleged to.be $5,772.70, with interest from May 9, *261 1887, at eight per cent. Upon it was credited a payment of $6,311.75 as of May 9, 1887.
It may be here stated that there was no endorsement on the note showing that it had ever been assigned or transferred by the original payee.
With the petition in that suit were filed copies of the paper constituting the note and warrant of attorney! With it was also filed an answer, in which an attorney, assuming, by virtue of the above warrant and not otherwise, to be the attorney of the construction company and of Wiley, confessed judgment against them for the full amount claimed by the bank.
On the very day of the bringing of that suit judgment was entered against the defendants therein for $11,419.68, being the amount of the obligation with interest at eight per cent from May 9, 1887, — the judgment reciting that the- attorney who acted under the warrant .of attorney, naming him in person, by virtue of that warrant, entered the appearance of the defendants, waived the issuing and service of process, confessed judgment, and released and waived all exceptions, errors and right of appeal.
The present action was by the National Exchange Bank against Wiley on the judgment rendered in the Ohio suit. The defendant disputed the plaintiff’s right to recover upon several grounds, one of which was that prior to the institution of the Ohio suit and more than twelve years before the commencement of the present action, the note had been fully discharged, so far as he was concerned, pursuant to an agreement between him and the holder. But on this writ of error we are concerned only with the part of the defense which distinctly raises a Federal question.
The defendant alleged that the warrant of attorney annexed to the note of April 26,. 1884, did not authorize a confession of judgment against the obligors except in favor .of the “holder ;” that so far from the National Exchange Bank being such holder when it brought the Ohio suit, the Tiffin National Bank, as early as March 2, 1885, purchased, received and *262 became the holder of the obligation, and thereafter remained and still was the holder ; that, therefore, the attorney professing to act in behalf of the defendants in the Ohio suit had no authority, in virtue of such warrant of attorney, to represent them in that suit, or to confess judgment in favor of the National Exchange Bank; that the defendant was neither served with process in the Ohio suit nor had any notice thereof; that the Ohio court was entirely without authority or jurisdiction to render judgment against him in favor of the plaintiff bank; and that its authority or jurisdiction could not be upheld consistently with the Fourteenth Amendment of the Constitution of the United States.
.The plaintiff insisted that it was the holder of the note when put in suit; further, that the court in Ohio had full power- and jurisdiction to render the judgment in question, and that neither personal’service of process on nor notice to the obligors was necessary in order to give that court jurisdiction of the parties and subject-matter.
Both at the trial and in the Supreme Court of Nebraska the bank contended that full faith and credit, as required by the Constitution and laws of the United States, would not be given to the proceeding's in the Ohio suit if the judgment in its f-avor was held not to be conclusive in respect of the authority of the Ohio court to render such judgment.
It is unnecessary to set out all the instructions. It is sufficient to say that the jury were, in substance, instructed that the warrant of attorney authorized a confession of judgment in favor of the holder of the note; that it was to be presumed upon the showing made by the record of the Ohio court that it had jurisdiction to render the judgment sued on; and that such' presumption continued throughout this case, unless the defendant, by a preponderance of evidence, proved that the plaintiff bank was not, in fact, the holder of the note when put in suit in Ohio. The jury were also instructed that if the plaintiff was found not to be such holder, the verdict should be for the defendant.
*263 The jury’s verdict was for the defendant and the judgment thereon was affirmed. Upon the issue as to the ownership of the note at the time it was sued on in Ohio there was, as the Supreme Court of Nebraska held, proof both ways.'
.Did the Ohio court have jurisdiction to render the judgment in question? It is a settled doctrine, Chief Justice Marshall said in Rose v. Himely, 4 Cr. 241, 269, that the effect of every judgment must depend upon the power of the court to render that judgment. In determining whether the Ohio court had authority to render the judgment against the obligors in the note, we must look first into the decisions of the highest court of that State.
In Osborn v. Hawley, 19 Ohio, 130 (1850), the plaintiff declared as endorsee of a promissory note, to which was attached a power of attorney to confess judgment. The report of that case is very meager, but in the course of the opipion the court said: “The power of attorney is not negotiable, and when the legal title to the note is transferred the power of attorney becomes invalid, and no power whatever can be éxercised under it, for the benefit of the endorsee; and he holds the note as if no such power had ever been attached to it.”
In
Marsden
v.
Soper,
In
Cushman
v.
Welsh,
In
Watson
v.
Paine,
But in
Clements
v.
Hull,
The latest case in the Supreme Court of Ohio is
Spence
v.
Emerine,
. Looking, at the face of the note, the National Exchange Bank insists that, being payee, it was also the holder within thé meaning of the warrant of attorney, however strictly' construed; that nothing else appearing than the note and warrant a confession of judgment in its favor was in conformity with law and usage in Ohio, as declared by the highest court of that State. We incline to think that thai position is justified -by the above cases, when carefully 'considered; and assuming such to be the law as administered in Ohio — which is the view most favorable to the plaintiff in error — the question still remains whether the judgment, when sued on in another State, may be collaterally attacked upon the ground that the party in whose behalf it was rendered was not in fact the holder, because not the real, owner, of the note? This question must, we think, be answered’in the affirmative. It can be so answered without doing violence to the Constitution, or the laws of the United States. "While the words of the warrant of attorney might be held to embrace any holder, even the equitable owner, who might rightfully prosecute an action on the note in his own name and for his own use, Clements v. Hull, 35 Ohio St. 141, above cited, yet if it was true, as alleged, that in 1885 the Tiffin National Bank purchased', received and became the owner of the note,- then the National Exchange Bank could not thereafter rightfully sue on it in *268 its name.and for its own use. Here, the confession of judgment was in behalf of the payee bank, which was not entitled to sue for its own use or to receive the proceeds, if it sold the note in 1885, and never afterwards became the owner. The words, in the warrant of attorney, "in favor of the holder .of this instrument,” ought not, as between the National Exchange Bank and the obligors, to be .construed as embracing the former after it ceased to be the owner of the note, but, at most, as only authorizing a confession of judgment in favor of the party who had become its real owner. It should not be supposed that the obligors intended, or that the payee bank ever understood them as intending, to authorize a confession of judgment in favor of one who was not entitled, of right, to demand payment from the obligors. That view accords with justice, and, not being inconsistent with the words in the warrant of attorney, it should be adopted.
By les on Bills says that "holder is a general wrord, applied to any one in actual or constructive possession of the bill, and entitled at law to recover or receive its contents from the parties to it.” Sharswood’s Ed. 66. So in 1 Parsons’ Bills and Notes it is said that "by the holder of negotiable paper is meant, in law, the owner of it; for if it be iiFhis,possession without title or interest he is, in general, considered only as the agent of. the owner.” p. 253. So that proof that the payee bank was not the owner of the note when it brought suit in Ohio tended to show that it was not in law the "holder” of the instrument within what must be regarded as the true meaning of the warrant of attorney, and, therefore, that the court was without authority to enter judgment by confession in its favor against the obligor. In other words, the defendant Wiley could show collaterally that he was not legally before the court — as he was not in any just sense — if his,; appearance was entered and judgment confessed- by one who had, in fact, at title time, no authority to do either; and, consequently, v that the court was without jurisdiction to proceed except on legal notice to him or without his appearance in *269 person or by an attorney authorized to represent him. If law-and usage in Ohio were to the contrary, then, such law and usage would be in conflict with the Constitution of the United States; for it is thoroughly settled that a personal judgment against one not before the court by actual service of process, or who did not appear in person or by an authorized attorney, would be invalid as not being in conformity with due process of law.
This whole subject was carefully considered in
Thompson
v.
Whitman,
Perceiving no error of law in the record/the judgment must be affirmed.
It is so ordered.
