This is an appeal from the judgment entered on our mandate in McIntosh v. Wiggins,
The judgment entered on our mandate, from which this appeal is taken, is as follows:
"1. That plaintiff, Mary Lois McIntosh, is bound by the original will construction decree of the Circuit Court of the City of St. Louis, entered on June 22, 1923, entitled Wiggins et al. v. Perry et al., being Cause No. 34209B and that under said decree plaintiff's right to the possession and enjoyment of the 1/12th interest in dispute in this case vested in her on October 17, 1942.
"2. That the plaintiff, Mary Lois McIntosh, her heirs, successors and assigns and her agents and attorneys be, and the same are, hereby enjoined and restrained from in any wise further prosecuting her claim for income and interest made in this case. *Page 930 [772] "3. Costs to be taxed against plaintiff."
[1] Appellant's notice of appeal also specifies an appeal from the order overruling her motion to declare void the judgment and decree entered herein; but this is not an appealable order under Section 126 of our Code. [Section 847.126 Mo. Stat. Ann.; as to motion to set aside under Section 1267, R.S. 1939 for error patent on the record see Wooten v. Friedberg,
[2] Usually on such an appeal the only question this court can consider is whether the judgment entered is in compliance with our mandate. [Booth v. Scott (Mo. Sup.), 240 S.W. 217; see also Hoelzel v. Chicago, R.I. P.R. Co.,
[3] Appellant argues that the decree in the original will construction case is void because it was in violation of mandatory statutes, namely, Sections 563, 3498, 3500, and 3504. (R.S. 1939 and Mo. Stat. Ann.) She claims these statutes required the court to hold that her title would vest upon the death of the first life tenant. (This was appellant's mother who died August 10, 1928.) Therefore, appellant's claim is that the judgment of this court in the first appeal in this case (
A void judgment is a nullity, without any force and effect whatever, and could not be res judicata. [30 Am. Jur. 939, Sec. 198; 31 Am. Jur. 91, Sec. 430; 34 C.J. 768, Sec. 1183, p. 899, Sec. 1310; Ripley v. Bank of Skidmore,
[4] The construction made in the original decree was not an impossible construction in the sense that there could be no such estate. (An estate for the lives of two persons, vesting in them jointly, with the whole life estate going to the survivor.) The question was one of construction of the language of the will to determine the intent of the testator and it was the purpose of the action to construe his will. This language was not clear and unambiguous; the will was long and involved. Certainly it was not a matter about which there could be no reasonable difference of opinion. As we said in the Kennard case (160 S.W.2d l.c. 713): "Able lawyers differ on the construction of wills and other written instruments, as the case law of all jurisdictions abundantly discloses." If they disagree on a construction made by the trial court, which is not an impossible construction, the remedy is by appeal and not by attacking it as a void judgment in another proceeding. We think that is the situation here.
Appellant at first recognized that the original decree was not a nullity because she attempted to have it changed by a nunc pro tunc entry. [Wiggins v. Perry,
[5] Appellant states as another ground, for holding the original decree and all subsequent judgments invalid, that "when a Court inadvertently determines that the title to the same property is in two different people at the same time its judgment is void and of no effect", citing 1 Black on [774] Judgments (2nd Edition), p. 9, Sec. 3; Gage v. Downey,
In that opinion (191 S.W.2d l.c. 640, 642), we held that "there is no conflict between the original will construction decree and the Kennard decree, so far as concerns (appellant herein)"; that "the original will construction decree continued in force and effect as to (appellant herein)"; and that "her interest under said decree vested upon Mrs. Wiggins' death, October 17, 1942." Most of appellant's brief is a re-argument upon these issues, attempting to show why our rulings in our opinion on the first appeal herein were erroneous. The time for that has gone by; appellant did re-argue those issues extensively in her motion for rehearing and suggestions on that appeal. The cases cited by appellant, such as Dunn v. Alton R. Co.,
The judgment is affirmed. All concur. *Page 934
