35 Kan. 215 | Kan. | 1886
The opinion of the court was delivered by
In the year 1877, John W. Hoffman, who was the sheriff of Columbia county, Pennsylvania, held in his hands a writ of fieri facias, or in other words, an execution, in favor of Thomas C. Bitter, and against Barney Weiss'and
We think the only question for us to determine in this case is, whether the judgment rendered in Pennsylvania is’ equally as good in Kansas as it is in Pennsylvania. If it was rendered without jurisdiction personally of the defendants, of course it would be void in Kansas; but if it was rendered with such jurisdiction, then it would be equally as good and valid in Kansas as it is in Pennsylvania; for, under § 1, article 4, of the federal constitution, “ full faith and credit shall be given in each state to the public acts, records and judicial proceedings of every other state.” The defendants claim that the judgment is void in Kansas for the following reasons:
“The record made by the prothonotary is designated ‘judgment docket entry.’ It is entered as at the September term, 1879. No. summons was’ ever issued and no appearance was ever made by either of the defendants. No judgment was ever rendered by the court itself. No finding was ever made by the court as to the amount due Hoffman, if anything, on said bond. The action of the prothonotary was never ratified and confirmed by the court at or during the subsequent September term. As far as appears from the record, and as far as the Pennsylvania law is concerned, upon which defendant in error relies, he was at liberty to take judgment on said bond the next day after it was executed, and it would have been just as valid in our courts as the one sued on. . . . It does not appear from the face of the instrument the amount that is due; in fact it does not appear from the instrument that any amount was due at the time it was filed by the prothonotary.”
Whether the court below erred in overruling the defendants’ demurrer to the plaintiff’s original petition is wholly immaterial, for the plaintiff subsequently filed an amended petition which we think states a good cause of action. And we do not
The judgment of the court below will be affirmed.