27 W. Va. 167 | W. Va. | 1885
Cynthia Stewart in September, 1880, filed her bill in the circuit court of Hancock county against her husband, Samuel Stewart, and one Caroline Shepherd. The bill in substance alleges, that in September, 1878, she brought a civil action against her husband, Samuel Stewart, in the.court of common pleas within and for the county of Columbiana in the state of Ohio (the same being a court of record) for the recovery of alimony and for such other and further relief as equity might require.” It further alleges, that in said suit the court decreed her $2,500.00 as alimony payable in ten days, and if not paid in ten days an execution might issue. The Ohio record of the court of common pleas is filed as an exhibit with the bill. The bill alleges further that the defendant, Samuel Stewart, owns a tract of land, describing it, in Hancock county; that the defendant is living in adultery with
On November 9, 1881, the defendant, Samuel Stewart, appeared and demurred to the bill on the following grounds :
“First. — It is multifarious.
“Second. — It declares the fact that theplaintiffbas not been divorced from the defendant and therefore can not maintain the suit.
“Third. — The bill improperly seeks to enforce an order of a foreign court, as a lien upon real estate within this State.
“ Fourth. — The plaintiff can not attach the real estate of her husband.
“ Fifth. — The order of the court of common pleas of Co-lumbiana county Ohio could only have been enforced by attachment and sequestration, and is not such an order as could have been enforced against the property, and it does not therefore furnish a basis for suit in this court.
“ Sixth. — As it does not appear that the plaintiff is a resident of this county, and does not appear that this defendant is a non-resident, this court has not jurisdiction of this cause.
“ Seventh. — The plaintiff can not maintain this suit in her own name.
“ Eighth. — The paper marked ‘ Exhibit A.’ and filed as a part of the bill is not properly certified.”
The cause came on to be heard on March 27, 1883, “ on the bill and exhibits filed therewith, the former orders made and entered therein, the process of summons duly executed
On the 25th day of June Caroline Shepherd presented her petition praying said court to re-hear the case as to her, and that she be allowed to make answer and defence thereto, which was ordered filed. The petition represents that Caroline Shepherd is a resident of Beaver county, Pennsylvania; that a decree has been rendered against her greatly affecting her rights, by which a valid judgment in her favor was postponed to the claim of the plaintiff; “that said decree was rendered against petitioner by default, she never having-appeared or made defence; that your petitioner was not served with process in said suit in this State, having been served merely with a copy of said process at her residence in said Beaver county, Pennsylvania, which, as she was advised by her counsel, was not such service as was bindiug upon her, and that she had never had notice of said decree until in June present, 1888.” She prayed that the cause as to her might be re-heard, and that she be allowed to make answer and defence thereto, &c. The petition was sworn to.
The commissioner appointed to make sale of the property made his report on June 25, 1883, that he had duly advertised, &c., and sold said attached property and G. D. Swear-ingen became the purchaser thereof at $1,961.93 and has complied with the terms of sale. On the 26th of June Samuel Stewart filed his exceptions in writing to the said
“IN the Circuit Court oe HaNoock County,
“ To the Honorable Geo. JE. Boyd, Judge of said Court:
“The undersigned Caroline Shepherd, one of the defend- . ants in the above entitled cause, hereby offers to your honorable court, that she will bid for the real estate sold by special commissioner Caldwell under decree made in this cause on June 25, 1883, the sum of $35.00 per acre, and that she will in all things fully comply with the terms of sale, and she hereby offers to give bond in such sum as the court may require, conditioned to comply with the offer here made.
“CaroliNE Shepherd.
“By J. B. Donehoo,her Solicitor.”,
Oh June 27, 1883, the court -entered an order denying the prayer of Caroline Shepherd’s petition and on the same day overruled the exceptions to the report and confirmed the sale. From the decree overruling the demurrer to the bill and that confirming the sale the defendants appealed.
The first error assigned is, that the court overruled the demurrer to the bill for the reasons stated in said demurrer. The first ground of the demurrer is, that the bill is multifarious. If it is, it is because it seeks to sell the land attached and also to remove the lien of the confessed judgment. This did not make the bill multifarious. It is every day practice to institute chancery suits to enforce liens and in the same suit to remove fraudulent conveyances out of the way.
The next ground is, that as the bill declares the fact, that the plaintiff is the wife of the defendant and has not been divorced from him, she can not maintain this suit. The object of the' suit is to gather the fruits of her decree for
In Glover v. Glover, 16 Ala. 440, it was decided, that where a husband abandons his wife without just cause and casts her upon society destitute of the means of subsistence, a court of chancery as an' original ground of equity will entertain a bill filed against him for alimony.
In Galland v. Galland, 38 Cal. 265, it was decided by a majority of the court, tbaf’the provision for alimony made in the statute concerning divorces was not intended to be a prohibition to the granting of alimony in other cases; that the power to decree alimony falls within the general powers of a court of equity and exists independent of statutory authority, and in the-exercise of its original and inherent powers a court of equity will in a proper case decree alimony to
But it is not on the ground that such suits have been maintained in many States, that we would enforce a decree for such cause in our own courts, nor would we sustain it because it agreed with our policy, nor refuse to enforce it here because it is hostile to our policy. The reason why we would enforce a decree, rendered by a court of competent jurisdiction in another State, is the fact that the Constitution of the United States requires us to do so. For the wisest purposes the States when they formed and adopted the Constitution of the United States provided in sec. 1 of Article IY. : “Full faith and credit shall be given in each State to the public acts, records and judicial proceedings of every other State.” If this clause had not been inserted in the Constitution and rigidly enforced by the judiciary in all the States, our relations as States to each other would have been anything but harmonious. Citizens by passing from one State to another could escape the effect of their contracts and obligations. It is not a question of State policy, whether we will or will not give effect to the judgments of courts of competent jurisdiction of other States. It is a question, whether we will in good faith live up to the constitutional obligations, which we have assumed. In Gilchrist v. W. Va. O. & O. L. Co., 21 W. Va. 115, we decided, that where a judgment rendered in another State is sought to be enforced iu a court in this State, our courts may enquire into the jurisdiction of the
The record of a judgment or decree of a court of common pleas of a county in another State, in the absence of evidence to the contrary, is tobe regarded as the evidence of a judgment of a court of general jurisdiction and is entitled to every presumption in favor of its validity and regularity. (Pringle v. Woolworth, 90 N. Y. 502.) If the court, which rendered the judgment or decree, was a court of general jurisdiction, the presumption is, it had jurisdiction of the particular case, and, to render the judgment or decree void, this presumption must be overcome by proof. (Gilchrist v. Oil Co., 21 W. Va. 115.)
We think according to these rules, that it appears from this record, that the court of common pleas of Columbiana county, Ohio, was a court of general jurisdiction, and that it had jurisdiction of the particular case, in which the decree ■was rendered, and that such decree should be enforced in this State.
Another ground assigned was, that the record is not properly certified. It is in the usual form, no defects in the certificate are pointed out, and I see no objection to it.
Another ground was, that the bill improperly sought to enforce an order of a foreign court as a lien on real estate in this State. The answer to this is, that no such purpose appears in the bill, Still another ground is that such ft decree
Itis also objected that the court had not jurisdiction, because it does not appear that the plaintiff is a resident of the county, and does not appear that the defendant is a non-resident. It is clearly alleged that the defendants are non-residents, and as this is not controverted, the court clearly had jurisdiction. (O’Brien v. Stephenson, 11 Gratt. 610.)
It is also insisted, that the plaintiff could not sue in her own name, and could not attach the real estate of her husband. That she can maintain the suit in her own name is shown in the cases, which I have cited to show that she could in many States recover alimony without suing for divorce. If she could sue in the Ohio court and recover the decree, I can see no reason why she may not sue in her own name in this State to enforce such decree. In some cases in this State, it is conceded, she can sue in her own name, and this is one of the cases ; and, as we have before seen, she may' enforce the decree by attaching the property of the husband.
The defendant, Samuel Stewart, did not answer the bill but demurred thereto, and he can not therefore by reason of said demurrer object to anything except the order overruling the demurrer. (Steenrod v. R. R. Co., 25 W. Va. 133.) The bill was taken for confessed as to him, but he did file written exceptions to the report of sale, -which were overruled, and the sale confirmed. These errors are all he complains of. He assigns no error in the decree ordering the sale but only in the decree overruling his demurrer, and that overruling his exceptions to the report of sale. These errors he may have reviewed without making a motion under ch. 124 of the Code to have errors in the decree ordering the sale corrected, as these are the only errors, of which he complains in his petition. But as he did not answer the bill, if in his petition he had complained of errors in the decree ordering the sale, we would not consider any' errors complained of, until ho had made his motion in the com-t below,
We have already reached the conclusion, that his demurrer was properly overruled. Did the court err, in overruling his exceptions to the report of sale ? His only ground was inadequacy of price. This is founded first on his own unsupported affidavit that “ the said real estate is in affiant’s judgment and belief worth at least $40.00 por acre, and he believes it to be worth $50.00 per acre. While this Court has held in Beaty v. Veon, 18 W. Va. 291, that the court may set aside a sale of lauds made by a special commissioner nuder its decree of sale upon any evidence or facts before it, which clearly show that the land was sold at a greatly inadequate price; and further whether the court will confirm a sale by a commissioner made under its decree must in a great measure depend upon the circumstances in each case, yet this Court has never set aside a sale for such a poor reason as set forth in the defendant Stewart’s affidavit. It is said it was not contradicted. It was not worthy of consideration. If he could get no stronger evidence than that to show that 1ns land sold for a grossly inadequate price, it was not worth while for the plaintiff to procure counter-affidavits at all. The affidavit is wholly insufficient to justify, setting aside the sale.
Should the court have set aside the sale because of the advance bid ? This Court in Kable v. Mitchell, 9 W. Va. 492 decided, that the offering to the court of a large amount in advance of the price bid, to be secured either by the advance offered being, paid into court or by bond with good security, as was done in that case, is generally the very best evidence of the great inadequacy of price bid at the sale, and the offer in that case of $11.52-|- per acre in advance of the bid was regarded as sufficiently large to justify the court in setting aside the sale made by the commissioner, the tract of land containing about 101 acres. It does not here appear why the court refused to receive the upset bid. The land sold
Did the court err in rejecting Caroline Shepherd’s petition for a re-hearing ? Sec. 12 of ch. 117 of the Acts of 1882 amending and re-enacting ch. 124 of the Code is as follows :
“13. When such order (of publication) shall have been so posted and published, if the defendants against whom it is entered, or the unknown parties, shall not appear at the next term of the court, after such publication is completed, the case may be tried or heard as to them. Personal service of a summons, scire facias or notice may be made on a non-resident defendant out of this State, which service shall have the same effect, and no other, as an order of publication duly posted and published against him. In such case the return must be made under oath, and must show the time and place of such service, and that the defendant so served is a nonresident of this State. Upon any trial or hearing under this section such judgment decree or order shall be entered as may appear just.”
Sec. 14 provides that “Any unknown parties or other defendant who was not served with process in this State and did not appear in the case before the date of such judgment, decree or order, or the representative of such, may within five years from that date, if he he not served with a copy of such judgment, decree or order more than one year before*178 the end of said five yeans, and if he was so served, then within one year from the time of such service, file his petition to have the proceedings re-heard in the manner and form provided by sec. 25 of'ch. 106 of this Code and not otherwise and all the provisions of that section are hereby made applicable to proceedings under this section.”
Section 25 of ch. 406, as amended and re-enacted by cli. 158 of the Acts of 1882, is as follows :
“If a defendant against whom on publication, judgment or decree has been or shall hereafter be rendered in an action or suit in -which an attachment has been or may be sued out and levied as provided in this chapter or his personal repre-sentives shall return to or appear openly in this State, he may within one year after a copy of such judgment or decree has been or shall be served upon him, at the instance of the plaintiff, or within five years from the date of such judgment or decree, if he he not so served, petition to have the proceedings re-heard. On giving security for the costs which have accrued, and shall thereafter accrue, such defendant shall be admitted to make defence against such judgment or decree as if he had appeared in the case before the same was rendered, except that the title of any bona fide purchaser of any property real or personal, sold under such attachment, shall not bo brought in question or impeached. .But this section shall not apply to any case in which the petitioner or his decondant was served with a copy of the attachment, or with process in the suit wherein it issued more than sixty days before the date of the judgment or decree, or to a case in which he appeared and made defence.”
Notv this petitioner says, that by the decree entered in the cause on March 27,1883 her judgment, (exhibited with the bill as confessed for $1,400.00), was declared void as against the plaintiff’s attachment-lien. “That your petitioner v'as not served with process in said suit in this State, having been served merely with a copy of said process at her residence in said Beaver county, Pennsylvania, which as she was advised by her counsel, was not such service as was binding upon her, and that she never had notice of said decree until in June present, 1883. Your petitioner therefore prays your honor to order and decree that the said spit, so far as her
It seems hard, if the petitioner states the truth, that she can have no relief in this suit. But to give relief would be to contradict not only the return of the sheriff on the process issued in the cause, but also to contradict the judicial ascertainment that the defendant had been served with process, and that the bill was taken for confessed as to her. The statute did not contemplate a case like this. It speaks of re-hearing, •where the suit has been heard upon an order of publication, or when the summons has been served on the party outside of the State, and the statute positively requires that “in such case the return must be made under oath and must show the time and place of such service, and that the defendant so served is a non-resident of this State.” It would be dangerous to permit the record to be contradicted in such a way. If the return had been made as required by the statute, no more difficulty would be apparent, than if the cause was heard on an order of publication. But as it is, the defendant asks to be permitted to contradict the return of the sheriff upon the summons issued in the cause, and this, after the decrees are all entered upon the bill taken for confessed as to such defendant. It has been repeatedly held, that a defendant will not even in the same return or suit be permitted to contradict the return of the sheriff upon the summons issued in the cause. (Slayton v. Chester, 4 Mass. 478; Taylor v. Lewis, 2 J. J. Marsh. 400; Smith v. Hornbeck, 3 Marsh. 392; Treble v. Frame, 3 Mon. 51; Stinson v. Snow, 10 Me. 263; Bowles v. Bowen, 45 N. H. 124; Angell v. Bowler, 3 R. I. 77; State v. Clerk of Bergen, Dutch. 209; Tulis v. Browley, 3 Minn. 277; Egery & Henckley v. Buchanan, 5 Cal. 53; Delingis, Adm’r v. Higgins, 26 Mo. 180; Stewart v. Stringer, 41 Mo. 400; Tillman v. Davis, 28 Ga. 495.)
In Bowyer v. Knapp, 15 W. Va. 291, it was decided, that the return of a sheriff upon a notice to take depositions could be contradicted. In Smith v. Hornbeck, supra, the court said : “But as it appears from the sheriff’s return that he delivered the possession to the plaintiff in virtue of the execution, parol evidence to show that possession was otherwise gained is inadmissible, For so high is the virtue of the
In Tillman v. Davis, 28 Ga. supra, Lumpkin, judge, in delivering the opinion of the court said : “But I will not multiply citations upon this point. ' I have investigated carefully in Brooke’s and Vinor’s Abridgements, and traced the question to its fountain-head, and find'it well settled, that by the common law no averment will lie against the sheriff’s return, and one reason assigned amongst others is, that he is a sworn officer to whom the law gives credit. Jenk. 143, Pl., 98. * * With a solitary exception (Watson v. Watson, 6 Conn. 334,) there is an unbroken array of American cases in favor of the well established English rule, that as between the parties to the process or their privies, the return of the sheriff is usually conclusive and not liable to collateral impeachment except for fraud or collusion ; a rule so necessary to secure the rights of the parties, and to give validity and effect to the acts of ministerial officers, leaving the persons injured to their redress by an action for false return; and that this rule concluding the parties, applies to mesne process by which the parties are brought into court.”
In Watson v. Watson, 6 Conn. 334 it was held, that the return of an officer whether on mesne or final process is prima fade evidence only, and liable to be disproved. Hosmer, C.
The same position has been taken in New York, Indiana, Kansas and Wisconsin. (Ferguson v. Crawford, 70 N. Y. 253; Butler v. State, 20 Ind. 169; Martin v. Gray, 19 Kan. 458; Pollard v. Wigman, 13 Wis. 569.)
We see no reason for departing from the rule of the common law. If it is thought wise to permit the return of a sheriff on mesne or final process in any case, where the suit is not against him and his sureties for a false return, to be contradicted, the legislature should furnish the remedy. We think the rule of the common law was founded in wisdom. Others besides the defendant .to the suit are interested, that the return of the sheriff should be regarded as absolutely true. Rights of property would suffer under any other rule, and there is sufficient protection against false returns of sheriffs in the right of action directly against him and his sureties. If this rule is rigidly adhered to, sheriffs will be much more careful, and the rights of the citizens much bet-» ter preserved, than if his returns either in mesne or final process could be contradicted. The only benefit, that could be given to the petitioner, would come through permitting her
For the errors pointed out above the decree of June 27, '1882, is reversed with costs to the defendant, Samuel Stewart, and the cause remanded with instructions to proceed as herein indicated; and the other decrees appealed from are affirmed.
ReveRsht) in Part. Remanded.