W. H. Morris & Sons v. Burgess

21 S.E. 27 | N.C. | 1895

The action was brought for judgment upon a note under seal and for foreclosure of a mortgage upon land executed to secure the debt. The court had in its discretion refused to allow an amendment, declaring on a judgment rendered on the bond in a court of competent jurisdiction of the State of Virginia, instead of upon the bond itself. The plaintiff offered on the trial a properly certified copy of the (42) judgment to prove that the defendants still owed the debt, for which the note was given. The defendants excepted to its admission as evidence of the debt and also to the instruction subsequently *29 given by the court to the jury, that it concluded the defendants from showing any payment upon the debt.

It was held by this Court in Peebles v. Guano Co., 77 N.C. 233, that a judgment in proceeding of attachment was "conclusive evidence that the debt sued on was due to the plaintiff in it to the value of the property attached but of nothing more." The court in that proceeding in rem acquired no jurisdiction of the person, and the judgment could be used to show nothing except the right of recovery to the value of the property proceeded against. Herman on Estoppel, section 322; Winfree v. Bagley, 102 N.C. 545. But for that purpose and to that extent it was competent. Here the action upon the note in the same state was in personam, but is admissible upon the same principle as in the other case, when it was offered, not to prove the debt sued on but to show the amount of damage the plaintiff was entitled to recover. Bigelow on Estoppel, p. 48 (5 Ed.).

The Constitution of the United States, Art. IV, sec. 1, and the Act of Congress passed in pursuance of it (U.S. Rev. Stat., sec. 509) were construed at an early day as giving to a judgment of a sister state the same effect as an exemplification of it would have in another court of the same state in which it was rendered. Mills v. Daryes, 7 Cranch, 481; Hampton v. McDonnell, 3 Wheat., 234. When such judgment is made the basis of an action, it is conclusive on the merits in every other state, if it appear that the court in which it was rendered had jurisdiction of the parties and the subject-matter. 2 Black, Judgments, sec. 857 and 859. The rule is that the judgment "if valid at home" is valid in any other state, and when sued on is conclusive on the (43) merits, even though under the laws of the state in which suit is brought to enforce it, such a judgment would have been void on account of the manner or form of entering it. Ritter v. Hoffman, 35 Kans., 215; 2 Black, supra, sec. 859.

The authorities in this country are conflicting upon the question whether one party must plead the record of a judgment of a sister state in order to give it a conclusive effect upon the opposing party. 2 Black, Judgments, sec. 783. Even where it is conceded to be the general rule, however, that a record is available as an estoppel only when specially pleaded, a former judgment, whether domestic or foreign, is both competent and conclusive as to the merits in case it was rendered after issue was joined in the action in which it is offered as evidence. A. E., 33, and note 3; 2 Black, Judgments, sec. 784, and note. The judgment under consideration was rendered after the Fall Term of the Superior Court of Perquimans, when the pleadings were filed and the plaintiff could not have made it the basis of an action begun before it was in existence. He had had no opportunity to avail himself of it till the trial. *30

For the reasons given and upon the authorities we feel no hesitation in holding that the exemplification of the judgment of a sister state was admissible in evidence. Without entering into a discussion of the general doctrine of pleading specially records, deeds or matters in pais, relied on to work an estoppel, there can be no question about the right to offer the evidence constituting the alleged estoppel, where it appears that there has been no opportunity afforded a party to specially plead it. In our case not only was the judgment obtained after this suit was at issue, but the plaintiff took the doubtful precaution of asking to be allowed (44) to declare upon a cause of action which might have been contended did not exist when the action was brought. There was

No error.