13 Wash. 626 | Wash. | 1896
The opinion of the court was delivered by
On the 19th day of November, 1890, in an attachment case of Wandell v. Miller, the latter furnished an undertaking signed by W. Pollock, the affidavit to the bond showing that the bondsman was William Pollock. In February, 1892, William Pollock was adjudged insane and committed to the Western
It is contended by the appellant that the judgment under which the property in question was sold was absolutely void for the reason that Pollock was insane at the time of the rendition of said judgment. This contention cannot be sustained under the authorities. There is no claim that he was insane at the time the bond was given. By giving the bond he subjected himself to the jurisdiction of the court, and we held in the case of Park v. Mighell, 3 Wash. 737 (29 Pac. 556), that the court had jurisdiction to render judgment against the surety on a forthcoming bond in an attachment proceeding without notice to such surety. It would not have been necessary, then, to have given Pollock notice had he remained sane, and the rule of law is in any event that a judgment is not void when taken against a lunatic. Whatever may be said of the justice or injustice of this rule, the rule itself is so well established by the authorities that it cannot be gainsaid.
“While an occasional difference of opinion manifests itself in regard to the propriety and possibility of binding femes covert and infants by judicial proceedings in which they were not represented by some competent authority, no such difference has been made apparent in relation to a more unfortunate and more defenseless class of persons; but by a concurrence of judicial authority lunatics are held to be within the jurisdiction of the courts. Judgments against them, it is said, are neither void nor voidable. . . . The proper remedy in favor of a lunatic being to apply to chancery to restrain proceedings, and to compel plaintiff to go there for justice. In a suit against a lunatic, the judgment is properly entered against him, and not against his guardian. A lunatic has capacity to appear in court by attorney. The legal title to his estate remains in him, and does not pass to his guardian.” [Citing a great many cases to sustain the text.]
See, also, Freeman on Executions, § 22; Withrow v. Smithson, 37 W. Va. 757 (17 S. E. 316). In the last mentioned case, it was decided that a judgment against a person insane at its rendition is not for that cause void, and is a lien on land.
The judgment, therefore, not being void, and no appeal having been taken from it, mere questions of irregularity in the proceedings in that case cannot be raised in this collateral attack. Belles v. Miller, 10 Wash. 259 (38 Pac. 1050). Therefore, we shall not discuss the many errors assigned by the appellant, which go to the irregularities of the former case.
The question, however, which has given us more trouble, is whether or not this judgment, having been rendered subsequent to the establishment of William Pollock’s insanity, would have the effect simply of establishing the claim of the judgment creditor to be
The complaint in this case failing to allege any fraud, and none appearing in the trial of the cause, we think the ruling of the court was correct, and the judgment will therefore be affirmed.
Hoyt, C. J., and Scott, Anders and Gordon, JJ., concur.