18 F. Cas. 927 | U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Minnesota | 1876
Two propositions are involved in the objection: 1. Is the judgment of the state court a foreign or domestic judgment? 2. If a domestic judgment, can the plaintiff attack it in this suit?
In nearly every instance where the judgment of a federal court sitting within the same territorial limits has been the subject of consideration in a state court, it has been regarded as a domestic judgment. Thomson v. Lee Co., 22 Iowa, 206, and cases cited. For obvious reasons the judgment of a state court would be regarded as domestic by the federal courts in the same state; both federal and state courts enforce and give effect to the same laws; summon jurors from, and their judgments operate upon and compel seizure and sale of the property of, the same citizens, and [they] are not, therefore, foreign to each other.
Being a domestic judgment, it may be shown void upon its face if the court rendering it had no jurisdiction of the defendant’s person, and it is equally true that, except for errors affecting the jurisdiction of the court, its validity cannot be questioned. If jurisdiction of the person was obtained in this case in the state court, this court must regard it as conclusive of the question determined, and give It full force and effect. The record discloses personal service upon the defendants, yet the plaintiff urges that the service was made by one of the parties to the action, and that such service is not permitted, and renders the judgment a nullity as to strangers to the action. This proposition is not without force. If the statute prescribes the mode and manner of the service of summons, and authorizes it to be made by any person except a party to the action, the question may well bfí asked whj' a judgment entered up without a'ny appearance of the defendants thus served is not beyond the authority of the court rendering it? Why should strangers to the judgment be prevented from establishing, perhaps a prior lien, or a superior' incumbrance, on showing that the service of summons was by an incompetent person? The answer is, that this error in the service did not affect the jurisdiction of the court and is only an irregularity. The actual service upon the defendants appears in the record, and no objection being made before judgment is rendered, the defect is cured by the entry. Such is undoubtedly the rule as between parties to the suit, and it is reasonable that strangers to the record should not impeach it in a collateral action. The service shows a defect in obtaining jurisdiction, not a want of jurisdiction, and it is presumed the court, when judgment was rendered, determined the service attempted sufficient, and passed upon that question. Thomson v. Lee Co.. 22 Iowa, 200.
Objection overruled.
[2 Abb. Prae. 344.]