16 Iowa 552 | Iowa | 1864
The court below ruled that the judgment or decree in the foreclosure suit of F. W. Prince, against Jaclcson, McDaniel et al, was wholly void, and, of course, as being incapable of sustaining a title professing to be derived thereunder. If that decree was void, the -rejection of the testimony was right, otherwise, wrong.
It is claimed by the defendants’ counsel to be void, because the court which rendered it had no jurisdiction of the person of the said McDaniel. In the foreclosure suit an original notice was issued, and, it appears, indorsed thus: “ Service of the within notice accepted; also received copy of petition. Barker, Chapline, Barney & Dillon, attorneys for A. McDaniel; Wilson, Utley & Doud, attorneys for W. H. Lee & Co.; L. W. Jackson and Margaret Jackson, John L. Harvey their attorney.”
None of the defendants appeared to the action, and the decree of foreclosure was by default; the decree reciting that “it appeared to the Court that due personal service had been had upon each and all of said defendants.”
We are constrained to the conclusion that the District Court erred in treating this decree as absolutely null and void. The defendants’ counsel argue in support of the ruling below, in this wise: the law does not invest an attorney-at-law with power to accept service; consequently the court acquired no jurisdiction, and as there was no appearance, the decree is wholly unauthorized and void. On the other hand, the plaintiff’s counsel argues that the District Court, rendering the decree, being a court of superior and general jurisdiction, the decree is conclusive and not liable to a collateral attack, unless it appears from the record itself, expressly or by necessary implication, that the court
This' case is unlike that of Tunis v. Withrow, 10 Iowa, 305, and many others of a like character to be. found in our reports, and which are cited by appellee’s counsel in two respects: 1st. In those.cases, the service. wg,s made by publication, and the law in relation to which mode of service early received (Broghill v. Lash, 3 G. Greene, 357; Pinkney v. Pinlmey, 4 Id., 324; Lot Two v. Swetland, Id., 465; McGahen v. Carr, 6 Iowa, 331; Hodson v. Tibbetts, ante), a peculiar Construction; and, 2d. In those cases the question as to jurisdiction of the Court, arose either directly on the appeal, or where the judgment or decree was" assailed directly by a bill in equity. Here the attack .is purely and confessedly collateral.
The question in this case more nearly resembles and falls within the rules and- principles laid down and established in Boker v. Chapline, 12 Iowa,. 204; and note remarks of Wright, J., as to the presumptions in favor of validity of judgments rendered by courts of general jurisdiction. And see Bonsall v. Isett, 14 Iowa, 309.
Taking the rule to be, that every presumption is in favor of the validity of the decree in question, unless this presumption is rebutted by what • appears affirmatively of record, the decree was clearly not void, either upon its face or upon the whole record.
This will appear, if we consider that, if the attorneys, (admitted “ to be members of the bar in good standing ”) who accepted service for the said McDaniel, had authority from him to do so, then the decree would, undoubtedly, be binding upon him. • -
When the notice was returned into court, the presump
Again, McDaniel did not make the objection that the decree was not binding upon him, but it was made by the defendant Griffin, who is an entire stranger to the decree objected to; but, in our judgment, even McDaniel could not make the objection in this collateral way. Without quoting from, we refer to the following cases, in addition to those above cited, as supporting the view taken in this opinion: Hefferman v. Burt, 7 Iowa, 320; Humphreys v. Same, Morris, 359; Denton v. Noyes, 6 Johns., 297; Pillsbury v. Dugan, 9 Ohio, 118, 120, where it is said that, “ where a court of general jurisdiction is required to exercise its powers upon a state of facts to be proved before it, the requisite proof is presumed to have been made, and the existence of the fact cannot be afterwards collaterally questioned.” Smith v. Bowditch, 7 Pick., 137.
Reversed.