13 Pa. Super. 103 | Pa. Super. Ct. | 1900
Opinion by
A summons in ejectment was issued returnable to the first Monday of November, 1896, and served on the defendant Sep
The contention of the appellant is that the court belów was without authority to strike off this judgment, for the reason that the record upon its face disclosed no irregularity. It may be conceded that the general rule is that a motion to strike off a judgment must be upon the ground of irregularity appearing upon the face of the record; it relies upon the legal rights of the party; while a motion to open a judgment is an appeal to the equitable power of the court to let the defendant into a defense. In the application of this rule, however, the court has not always confined the inquiry to what was strictly the record at the time the judgment was entered, and in determining the propriety of striking off judgments they have considered in connection with the recoi’d the undisputed facts presented by the parties, and if facts are admitted to be true which clearly establish that the court had no jurisdiction to enter the judgment, or
It therefore appears that the question to be determined in proceedings of this nature is not whether the judgment is void, but whether upon the undisputed facts the court was without authority to enter it. A judgment void upon its face may be attacked collaterally, but one which is only irregular and voidable can only be attacked in the same forum and in the same proceeding. A judgment against a defendant who is dead at the time of the entry thereof is not void and cannot be attacked in a collateral proceeding: Warder v. Tainter, 4 Watts, 270. But such a judgment is erroneous and reyersible by the personal representatives or heirs of the deceased by a suitable proceeding commenced for that special purpose. In such a ease, the judgment is reversible, in error, if the fact and time of death appear on the record, or in error coram nobis if the fact must be shown aliunde: Yaple v. Titus, 41 Pa. 195; Knox v. Flack 22 Pa. 337.
In the present case the judgment was clearly irregular but it was not void, and it bounds the lands of the appellees. They could not challenge the regularity of the judgment in a collateral proceeding, and being privies they had at their disposal the same remedies which a defendant has in an attack upon such an irregular judgment. The fact of the death of the defendant did not appear in the record, and the only way open for them to attack this judgment under our practice was a motion to set it aside or strike it off, which has supplanted the older practice of proceeding by audita querela, or error coram nobis: Davidson v. Thornton, 7 Pa. 128.
At common law this action would have abated upon the death of the defendant, but under the 3d section of the act of April 13, 1807, the writ was saved, and the plaintiff could have compelled the substitution as defendants of the parties next in interest: Darnes v. Welsh, 7 S. & R. 202. The law has thus marked out for plaintiff the manner in which he must proceed. The defendant having died before he was required to appear, he was not at the time of his death in default. The statute
Judgment affirmed.