17 Or. 42 | Or. | 1888
This proceeding was commenced in the county court of Marion County, by filing a petition properly verified, and the service of a citation directed to the minor as well as his guardian. An amended petition was filed, in which it was alleged substantially as follows:
Exhibits annexed to the petition are the complaint, answer, stipulation, and final decree of the circuit court of Marion County, Oregon, rendered and given in a suit in said court, wherein Jane Murphy was plaintiff and said Clark C. McCorkle was the defendant.
It was alleged in the complaint in that suit that Jane Murphy is the widow of James Murphy, deceased; that Lydia McCorkle, theretofore deceased, was the daughter of James and Jane Murphy; that Clark C. McCorkle was the only heir at law of said Lydia and one Alexander Mc-Corkle, also deceased; that on the sixth day of April, 1868, the said James and Jane Murphy made a deed to Alexander McCorkle, conveying to him certain lands, which are the same lands described in the petition in this proceeding, which lands when conveyed were reasonably worth seven thousand dollars; that said deed did not express the true or full consideration for the conveyance of said lands; that a further consideration for said deed was the .agreement that said Alexander McCorkle, his heirs and assigns, should maintain and support the said James and Jane Murphy during their and each of their natural lives, and the words expressing said agreement Were omitted from said deed by mistake.
The alleged agreement and mistake were denied by the answer, but by a stipulation entered into and signed by the attorneys of the parties, and by the defendant’s guardian, J. E. Murphy, that “by way of and as and for a compromise herein, that the deed mentioned in the de
Exhibit B referred to is as follows:—
“Salem, Oregon, March 29, 1884.
“C, C. McCorkle, Minor, Dr.,
“To M. R: Savage:—
“To maintenance and support of James and Jane Murphy from the fifth day of May to the ninth day of October, 1883, at $40 per month................................. $205 83
“To medicines furnished..................... 9 00
“To funeral expenses of James Murphy........ 24 00
“Total....................... $238 33
County op Marion.
“I, M. It. Savage, being first duly sworn, say that the foregoing bill is correct, as-1 verily believe.
“M. It. Savage.
“ Sworn to and subscribed before me this twenty-ninth day of March, 1884. E. A. Downing, Notary Public.
“Allowed this twenty-ninth day of March, 1884.
“T. C. Siiaw, County Judge.”
Exhibit C is a like claim for the support of Jane Murphy from the twenty-fifth day of August to the twenty-fifch day of November, 1885, at the rate of $33-£ per month, $100; and exhibit D is a like claim for the support of Jane Murphy from November 25, 1885, to February 7, 1886, at $33¿ per month, and her funeral expenses, $126.60.
Each of these claims are verified and indorsed in like manner as exhibit B by the county judge of Marion County. The defendants demurred to said petition and assigned these grounds of demurrer:—
1. Said petition does not state facts sufficient to show that said plaintiff has any cause of action or suit against the defendants, or either of them.
2. Said petition does not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action, or suit, or proceeding against said defendants, or either of them, or against the premises described in the petition.
3. Said petition does not state facts sufficient upon which to base the issuing of the citation herein.
4. Said petition does not state facts sufficient to show that the plaintiff has any claim whatever against the defendants, or either of them, or against the premises mention.ed therein, on which to base the citation herein, or on which to give this court jurisdiction over the persons
Upon appeal to the circuit court, the action of the county court was reversed, and a decree given in favor of the plaintiff for his costs, and the cause remanded to the county court for further proceedings, from which decree this appeal is taken. All of the points made by the demurrer present but two objections: one is, whether or not facts stated in the petition are sufficient to entitle the plaintiff to any relief whatever; the other is, whether or not the county court has jurisdiction to grant such relief.
1. If the defendant is liable in any form, or under any circumstances, for the support of James and Jane Murphy, such liability arises out of the decree above mentioned. The cause of suit upon which that suit was founded was the mistake made in the deed which James and Jane Murphy executed to Alexander McOorkle, the defendant’s ancestor. When Alexander McOorkle died, the land which he acquired by the deed in which the alleged mistake existed descended to the defendant Clark C. McOorkle subject to the right in the grantors in said deed to have said alleged mistake corrected. This is the right which Jane Murphy, one of the grantors in the deed, asserted in the suit, and sought to have such deed corrected by the decree, so as to insert therein a provision which would render Alexander McOorkle, his heirs and assigns, liable for the support of the grantors during the lives of each. If the grantee received the deed under a contract which subjected the land to that charge, and the clause declaring his obligation was omitted by mistake, it was entirely proper for the surviving grantor to ask to have it corrected.
During the progress of the suit, and after it was at issue, the defendant, through his attorneys and by his guardian, compromised said suit by entering into an agreement
The general rule under the former chancery practice was, that an infant was as much bound by a decree against him as an adult. A standard author,-writing upon the chancery practice,says: “An infant is as much bound by a decree in equity as a person of full age; therefore, if there be an absolute decree made against a defendant who is under age, he will not be permitted to'dispute it, unless upon the same grounds as an adult might have disputed it; such as fraud, collusion, or error.” (1 Daniell’s Chancery Practice, 164.) Freeman on Judgments, section 151, announces the same- principle. He says: “If an absolute decree be made against an infant, he is as much bound as a person of full age, and will not be permitted to dispute the decree, except upon the same grounds which would be available if he were an adult.” And this court has fully adopted and sanctioned the same view. (English v. Savage, 5 Or. 518,)
2. But it was argued that the decree was founded upon a stipulation made-by way of- compromise, and that for that reason it is void. In this collateral inquiry, if it were competent to look behind the decree to see upon what it was based, — which we do not concede, — the result claimed by the appellants- would not follow,- The rule seems to be, that the court will not usually make a decree by consent where infants are concerned without an in-i quiry whether it is for their benefit; yet- when a decree has been pronounced without that previous step, it is considered as of the same authority as if such an inquiry had been directed, and a-certificate thereupon made, that it would be for their benefit. (1 Da.niell’-s Ghaneery
3. But at this point in the investigation we are confronted with a more serious and difficult question. This decree is binding and conclusive between the parties to it and their privies, but in no manner affects strangers. A stranger to a decree can neither be benefited nor- prejudiced by it. These principles are so entirely elementary that they do not need a citation of authorities to sustain them. What facts, then, does the plaintiff show which would enable him to compel the defendant to perform the duty and discharge the obligation which, under the decree, he owed to Mrs. Murphy, the plaintiff?
It was suggested on the argument that the allowance of their claims by the county judge of Marion County gave them a status somewhat different from that which they would have occupied without it. This allowance by him was made under the decree already referred to, and the only legal sanction it has is such as was imparted to it by that decree. There is no law conferring any such jurisdiction on the county judge, and whatever effect might have been given to its exercise between the parties to the decree, it is conceived that it could not be extended to the claims or demands of a person who was not a party to it.
If it be conceded that parties to a decree could by stipulation by way of compromise bind themselves to submit to that method of ascertaining and adjusting the amounts to be paid under such decree, it would not follow that a stranger to it not in privity with either party could take advantage of it, and establish a right by virtue thereof.
If, as is probable, the present plaintiff furnished the deceased Mr. and Mrs. Murphy with the maintenance charged for, at their request, — which does not appear from this record, — he has a claim against them which might be worked out through an administrator; and if the defendant refused to support and maintain them, as he was bound to do by the terms of the decree, he remains liable to the administrator of the deceased for the non-fulfillment of that duty. Having reached the conclusion that the petition does not state sufficient facts to entitle the plaintiff to any relief, the consideration of the second question suggested becomes unnecessary.
The decree of the circuit court must be reversed, and the proceeding dismissed without prejudice.