214 Mo. 23 | Mo. | 1908
This is a proceeding under section 650, Eevised Statutes 1899, to try and determine the title to 320 acres, the south half of section number one, in township 28, of range 6 west, in Shannon county, Missouri. The proceeding was begun December 23, 1904,- and was tried at the March term, 1905, resulting in a judgment for the defendants, from which plaintiff has appealed to this court.
The land in controversy is wild and uncultivated timber land and not in the actual posséssion of any
On the trial it was admitted by both plaintiff and the defendant that Onslow B. Todd was the common source of title. The plaintiff then introduced in evidence a quitclaim deed from said Todd and wife to plaintiff of date November 11,1904, and filed for record on November 26, 1904, conveying* to plaintiff all of the lands in controversy. Plaintiff then rested.
The defendants then offered in evidence a sheriff’s deed, executed by J. T. Bay, ex-sheriff of Shannon county, Missouri, which recited a judgment rendered in the circuit court of Shannon county, on the 16th day of September, 1898, in favor of William H. Snyder and James B. Pearson, executors of the last will and testament of Sarah Pearson, deceased, and against Onslow B. Todd, for $1,634.14 for debt and $23.02 for costs and reciting that said judgment had been adjudged a lien and charge upon said south one-half of section one, township 28 north, of range 6 west, upon which a special execution was issued from the clerk’s office of said court in favor of the said Snyder and Pearson, executors of the last will and testament of Sarah Pearson, deceased, and against said Onslow B. Todd, of date December 31, 1898, by virtue of which the said sheriff levied upon and seized all the right, title, interest and estate of said Onslow B. Todd of, in and to said 326 acres of land. The deed then recites that after having given twenty days’ notice of
Thereupon the plaintiff offered in evidence the original files in the attachment suit of William H. Snyder and James B. Pearson, executors of the last will and testament of Sarah Pearson, deceased, against Onslow B. Todd, being the suit upon which the defendants’ sheriff’s deed is based. Also a duly certified copy of the judgment and proceedings of the common pleas court for the second division of the second judicial district of the State of Ohio, which' includes Clark county in the State of Ohio, upon which said judgment an action by attachment in the circuit court of Shannon county was based. Also a duly certified copy of the record of the probate court of Clark county, Ohio, showing the final settlement of said William H. Snyder and James B. Pearson, executors of the last will and testament of Sarah Pearson, deceased, of date January 31, 1898, and especially the order of publication in the circuit court of Shannon county in the attachment case of said Snyder and Pearson against
The plaintiff’s contention is, first, that the attachment proceedings were void because the court rendering the judgment therein had no jurisdiction of the person of said Onslow B. Todd, because the order of publication was void, and, second, that under no circumstances did the respondent obtain title by its deed from W. H. Snyder.
I. From the foregoing statement it will be readily observed that this is a collateral attack by the plaintiff upon the judgment of the circuit court of Shannon county in the case of Snyder & Pearson v. Onslow B. Todd. That was an action by attachment and the lands, in controversy herein were seized and levied upon by the sheriff in pursuance of a writ of attachment in due form, and an abstract of said attachment showing the names of the parties to the suit and the amount of the debt and date of the levy and the description of the real estate levied on was duly filed by the sheriff in the office of the recorder of deeds of Shannon county, on the 9th day of July, 1898. The first ground • of assault upon said attachment proceedings and judgment is based upon the recital in the order of publication, which states, “The object and general nature of which is to recover from him [the said Onslow B. Todd] the sum of $1,634.14, by reason of a judgment heretofore rendered in the court of common pleas of
In support of this contention plaintiff cites us to Janney v. Spedden, 38 Mo. 396. In that case it was ruled by this court that, where defendant, a non-resident, is brought into court by an order of publication, and does not appear, the plaintiff cannot have any other or different relief than that prayed for in his petition. If after* publication the plaintiff amend his petition and take a different judgment from that originally prayed, the judgment will be null and void;
Applying the doctrine of the foregoing cases to the facts before us, it is clear there was no amendment to the petition in this ease, and if as said in Railroad v. Atchison, supra, the defendant is brought into .court to answer the allegations of the petition, an inspection of that petition would have demonstrated the clerical error of the clerk in misdescribing the court in which the judgment was rendered, and the defendant, was at once apprised that the plaintiffs were seeking to recover a judgment on the unpaid balance of the judgment in the common pleas court of Clark county, Ohio. It is clear, moreover, that this case does not fall within the principle announced in Janney v. Sped-den, supra, in this, that no change in the relief sought was made by the mere fact of the clerk misdescribing the court in which the judgment was rendered. Had the defendant appeared in that case, as he had a right to do, and pleaded nul tiel record, no question what
II. But it is urged that the attachment proceedings were and are void because the order of publication did not describe the land attached. In support of this contention, the plaintiff relies upon the decisions of this court in Milner v. Shipley, 94 Mo. 106; Winningham v. Trueblood, 149 Mo. l. c. 584; Stewart v. Allison, 150 Mo. l. c. 347. In those cases and others, which were actions under the tax law of this State to enforce the State’s lien against specific real property, it was held that a statement of the object and general nature of a petition, which omitted the land against which the lien was sought, was wholly insufficient. With those decisions we are entirely satisfied, but in the present case,' we are confronted with another well-settled principle of law. In Hardin v. Lee, 51 Mo. l. c. 244, it was said by this court: “In attachment causes, the jurisdiction over any given subject-matter is obtained by levy thereon of a writ properly issued; and no matter what or-how great errors or irregularities may subsequently occur, the res remains still in the grasp of the court, and its judgment in regard thereto- will be valid and binding until reversed on error or by appeal, or set aside in a direct and appropriate proceeding for that purpose.” This statement of the law was reiterated in Freeman v. Thompson, 53 Mo. 194. And in this last-mentioned case, it was further said: “The difference to- be observed between those proceedings, whose seizure at the outset at once confers jurisdiction over that which is seized, and those methods of procedure which look to the acquisition or enforcement of some specific right, title or remedy, is this: That in the former class of cases, jurisdiction without
While it may he conceded that the clerk could, with propriety, have stated that the land of the defendant had been attached and have described the land in the order of publication, the statute, section 575, Revised Statutes 1899, makes no- such requirement, as did the statute of 1855, Revised Statutes 1855; page 246, section 23, upon which Duressett’s Admr. v. Hale, 38 Mo. 346, was decided. But even under that statute in Harris v. Grodner, 42 Mo. 159, in which the publication notified a defendant his property was “about to be attached,’’ it was held sufficient.
Counsel for plaintiff has urged that the plaintiffs had no capacity to sue because foreign executors as such had no right to maintain an action in this State, and moreover having administered the estate of Mrs. Pearson and been discharged, of course had no authority to bring suit on a judgment in favor of her estate, but these objections were clearly matters of defense, which could have been pleaded successfully against any judgment in their favor, but no such defense was interposed and plaintiff who was no party to that action cannot in this collateral proceeding avail himself of these defenses to have the judgment obtained by said executors adjudged void. Onslow B. Todd had three years after the rendition of that judgment in which to have attacked the same on said grounds, but did not do so, and that judgment is now unreversed and final. These alleged errors and irregularities do not go to the jurisdiction of the circuit court of Shannon county and cannot avail plaintiff in this' collateral action.
It results that the judgment of the circuit court must be and is affirmed.