18 N.M. 473 | N.M. | 1914
OPINION OP THE COURT.
It was an irregularity in a preliminary proceeding, not an entire want of the preliminary proceeding. The distinction is drawn between “a want of jurisdiction and a. defect in obtaining jurisdiction” (1 Freeman on Judgments, sec. 126), between “a case where there is no service whatever and one which is .simply defective or irregular” (id.) As was said in Leonard v. Sparks, 117 Mo. 103, 22 S. W. 899, the defendant in the latter case has his day in court to object to the process. The test is in such cases whether the court had a right to decide or whether having the right to decide its judgment was-merely erroneous. In this’ case the Justice of the Peace-had no right to decide.
While the complaint was demurred to because it showed on its face that the appellants had a remedy at law by appeal or certiorari, yet at the time of the bringing -of this action their time for availing themselves of those remedies had long since passed. Before they will be denied the relief they ask, they must have lost the right to those legal remedies by their laches or negligence. Assuming that the appellants had actual knowledge that the judgment had been, given against them, were they legally bound to appeal from it or remove it to the District Court by writ of certiorari? In a very similar ease, National Metal Company v. Greene Consolidated Copper Companay, — Ariz. — , 89 Pac. 535, 9 L. R. A. N. S. 1062, the Court said: — “If the allegations in this complaint are true, there was no service whatsoever, and the judgment, though not void on its face, is void in fact; and plaintiff’s only adequate protection lies in this action. That it did not act upon the information acquired from Pellegrin, was not neglect, was not ‘sleeping in its rights,’ it was inaction in reliance upon its legal rights, in reliance upon the constitutional guaranty of due process of law. Such is not the inaction which bars relief in equity. To accomplish such a bar, it is said that the inaction must be such as amounts to a violation of a positive legal duty.’ Pom. Eq. Jur., 2nd ed., 856, p. 1187.”
And in Cooley v. Barker, 122 Iowa 440, 98 N. W. 289; 101 Am. St. 276, being an action to enjoin the enforcement of a judgment of a Justice of the Peace, it was said:—
‘‘Appellees contend that the plaintiff is not entitled to relief because of laches, and for the further reason that he does not show that he was not in fact indebted to the plaintiff in the judgment. There is no foundation either in fact or in law for the first proposition. Plaintiff had no occasion to act-until some attempt was made to enforce the void judgment. When that was done, he brought this action. It was timely, and defendants were in no manner prejudiced by the delay.”
These considerations would appear to be conclusive against the proposition that the appellants were bound to act, though they knew the judgment had been given against them.
of their rights of which they now complain. On both appeal and writ of certiorari, the case is tried in the District Court ele novo, and no advantage can be taken of an error in the Justice of the Peace court as to process. If the Justice had jurisdiction of the subject matter of the action and could have obtained jurisdiction of the persons of the defendants, on appeal or certiorari the District Court has complete jurisdiction, because to pursue either course, the appellants must have entered their general appearance. Crolot v. Maloy, 2 N. M. 198.
In addition to waiving their rights, the appellants would have been compelled to give bond, pay a docket fee in the District Court and perhaps employ an attorney. The amount involved does not effect the principle involved. In a case involving a few dollars, a poor man might be compelled to abide an invasion of his rights.
If the statutes permitted the Justice of the Peace upon a special appearance to set such a judgment aside, or if, on removal, the District Court might reverse for such an error and cast the party at fault in the costs, the case would be different. Such legal remedies would be as complete, practical, and as efficient to the ends of justice and its prompt administration, as the remedy in equity.
“This Court has repeatedly declared in affirmance of the generally accepted proposition that the remedy at law, in order to exclude a concurrent remedy at equity, must be-as complete, as practical, and as efficient to the ends of justice and its prompt administration, as the remedy in equity.”
The remedy appellants now seek is beyond any doubt far-more complete, practical and efficient to the ends of justice and its prompt administration than any known action at law.
Por the reasons above stated, the judgment of the lower-court is reversed, and this cause remanded.