15 Tex. 500 | Tex. | 1855
This suit was brought on a decree of the Court of Chancery of the State of Mississippi against George Norwood. At the institution of this suit, upon the decree, George Norwood was dead, and an administration on his estate had been taken. This suit was against his administratrix, one of the appellants in this Court, and against the other appellants who held a portion of the slaves claimed to have been the property of the deceased, under conveyances or bills of sale alleged to have been made with a fraudulent intent, to defeat the payment and satisfaction of the decree sued upon. The deeds appeared and were alleged to have been made a few days before the death of George Norwood, and the administratrix did not inventory the property as appertaining to the estate of her intestate, and she was a beneficiary under one of the deeds. The petition sought to set aside these voluntary deeds and to subject the property so conveyed to the payment of amount decreed against the intestate by the decree of the Court of Chancery of the State of Mississippi. There was no
The suit in Mississippi was to recover two slaves or the value thereof. The slaves do not appear to have been attached and the decree is for the slaves or in default thereof, the value put upon them by the auditor. The suit in this State was for the money. Had the slaves been within the jurisdiction of the Court of Chancery of Mississippi, and a decree settling the right of property to be in the plaintiff, that decree would have operated in rem, and would have concluded the rights of the defendant; but it was not so rendered, and this suit does not treat it as a proceeding in rem, as it is not brought to recover them. Professor Greenleaf, commenting on the admissibility and effect of the judgments of one State in the tribunals of another, under the Constitution and Statutes of the United States, says, “By these provisions such judgments, authenti- “ cated as the Statutes provide, are put upon the same footing
In the case of McVicker v. Beedy, the original suit was in the Supreme Court of Illinois, upon a contract made in that State, and the defendant at that time residing there. Previous
In the case of D’Arcey v. Ketchum et al., (11 Howard’s U. S. R. 165,) it was decided that a judgment under the statute of New York, against a member of a firm residing in Louisiana, who had not been served with process, and who did not appear, nor make a defence, could not sustain an action brought upon it in Louisiana, although the judgment obtained in New York under the statute that made service upon one joint debtor good against the others, was a valid judgment where it was rendered ; and this was on the ground of a want of notice.
The cases cited were all adjudicated with a reference to the Constitution of the United States and the Act of Congress of 1790, giving faith and effect to the judgments of one State in another, and show that it is not true that the judgment when sued on, of one State in another, must have the same legal effect that it had in the State where it was rendered. The reference to Judge Story and Professor Greenleaf were cited with the same view. And it is evident, as Judge Story remarks, that the tendency of the decisions is to restrict the force and effect of judgments of one State when sued upon in another, and to regard the Constitution as only guaranteeing to such judgments full faith as evidence, without impugning the old Common Law doctrine that was regarded in force, allowing the Courts where suit was brought on such judgments to impeach them for want of jurisdiction, and that in personal actions a want of notice amounted to a want of jurisdiction,
It seems from the investigation we have made, that a judgment of another State, when sued on in this, can be impeached for fraud ; that if there was no personal service the judgment is void for want of jurisdiction ; and that such judgment, so far as regards its effect, is not put upon a better footing than a domestic judgment, and its validity subject to be tried as one of our own judgments, and does not rest, for its support, upon the law of the forum where it was rendered.
In the case before us, the defendants set up the defence that the judgment was fraudulently obtained, and that the defendant had no notice of the suit in which the decree was rendered, and offered to introduce evidence to sustain their defence set up in their answer, but were not permitted to do so. We have shown that if the want of notice appeared from the record, the the judgment would be regarded as a nullity, on which an action could not be sustained; because that without notice the Court rendering the judgment had no jurisdiction. And the question is, can the fact that there was no notice, in the face of the record sued on, be shown by resorting to evidence outside of it ? We believe that it can be done without violating any established rule laid down by the Judicial decisions. The rule is believed to be universal, not only in cases arising upon judgments of a sister State, but by the Common Law, and acknowledged also to prevail in most civilized governments, that
But, to return to the correctness of receiving evidence to falsify the record, we have seen that in the case of D'Arcey v. Ketchum et al., cited from 11th Howard, it was admitted that the judgment of the Court of New York could not, in that State, have been impeached on the ground of a want of jurisdiction ; yet, when sued on in Louisiana, it was successfully impeached upon that ground. If a suit was brought on one of our own judgments, it cannot be questioned, but it would be competent for the defendant to go behind the judgment, and show a want of jurisdiction in the Court that rendered the judgment, or to show that it was obtained by fraud. In effect, we so ruled in Gross v. McClaran, 8 Texas, 341, and in Jones
There are several irregularities presented in the record from Mississippi, which though not amounting to a nullity of .the judgment, yet they cannot fail to cast a suspicion upon it. There had been an attachment issued and an injunction, neither •of which were returned or notice of them taken after issuance, .although they had issued before the issue of the subpoena, which alone was returned executed. There is a report of an auditor, and the record does not show the reference, but in the decree the Chancellor assumes the fact that it had been referred.
Reversed and remanded.