Reid v. Holmes

Decision Date02 September 1879
Citation127 Mass. 326
PartiesAlexander F. Reid v. Mary A. C. Holmes, administratrix
CourtUnited States State Supreme Judicial Court of Massachusetts Supreme Court

Argued March 11, 1878

Suffolk. Contract against the administratrix of David W Holmes for goods sold and delivered to the intestate. Writ dated September 12, 1876. Answer: 1. A general denial. 2. A former judgment for the same cause in an action brought by the plaintiff against the intestate. The case was submitted to the decision of the Superior Court, and, after judgment for the plaintiff, to this court on appeal, upon the following facts:

The debt sued on was due to the plaintiff from the intestate. On April 3, 1874, a writ for the same cause of action was sued out by the plaintiff against the intestate from the Municipal Court of the city of Boston, a court having jurisdiction of the parties and the subject-matter, and was duly served on him, and returned and entered on April 11 in that court. On April 14, the defendant was legally defaulted, and the action was continued by the court for further proceedings therein. On December 3, on motion of the plaintiff, final judgment was entered up in that case against the defendant for the amount claimed in the declaration, and on December 4, 1874 execution for said amount and costs was issued in due course. The intestate died October 3, 1874. His death was not known to the plaintiff or his attorney until after the issue of the execution, and was not suggested in that court until May 1877, when the execution, which had never been put in an officer's hands, was returned and filed, with a suggestion of the death and an indorsement by the plaintiff's attorney that no service of the execution had been made, and that the execution was inoperative and void. The administratrix was not summoned to appear in the Municipal Court, nor did she appear there, nor know of the suit in that court until long after the death of the intestate.

If upon the above facts, so far as they were competent, the plaintiff was entitled to maintain this action, judgment was to be entered for him for $ 118.82, and interest; otherwise judgment for the defendant.

Judgment for the defendant.

W. S. Macfarlane, for the plaintiff.

E. W. Sanborn, for the defendant.

Gray C. J. Colt & Soule, JJ., absent.

OPINION

Gray C. J.

There is nothing in the record of the former judgment to show that it is invalid. The memorandum of the plaintiff's attorney on the execution was made after the judgment, is no part of the record, and is inadmissible in the plaintiff's favor to impeach a judgment valid upon its face.

If the fact, agreed in the case stated, of the death of the defendant after the default and before the judgment, is competent to be considered, it does not show that the judgment is absolutely void. The court, at the time of the bringing of the former action, had jurisdiction of the subject-matter and of the parties, and might, after the death of the defendant, have rendered judgment against him as of a previous term. Kelley v. Riley, 106 Mass. 339, 341. Tapley v. Martin, 116 Mass. 275. Tapley v. Goodsell, 122 Mass. 176, 181. Or the judgment actually entered might, on motion of the plaintiff, have been amended so as to stand as a judgment nunc pro tunc, or have been vacated and the administratrix summoned in to defend the action. Stickney v. Davis, 17 Pick. 169.

Even if (which it is unnecessary to determine) that judgment might have been reversed by writ of error for error in fact, yet the error being a mere irregularity in the mode of exercising a judicial authority vested in the Municipal Court, it would seem that neither party could collaterally dispute the validity of the judgment; and certainly the plaintiff, who has converted his demand into the form of a judgment, valid upon its face, and which the defendant has made no attempt to set aside or avoid, but has asserted the validity of by pleading it...

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33 cases
  • Campbell v. Upson
    • United States
    • Texas Court of Appeals
    • May 11, 1904
    ...administration on the estate of a living person, for in each of those cases the court never acquired jurisdiction of the cause." Reid v. Holmes, 127 Mass. 326. See, to same effect, Mitchell v. Schoonover (Or.) 17 Pac. 867, 8 Am. St. Rep. 282; Holman v. Fisher, 49 Miss. 472; and Mosely v. Mf......
  • Hinkle v. Kerr
    • United States
    • Missouri Supreme Court
    • February 15, 1899
    ... ... open to collateral attack. Black on Judgments, sec. 200; ... Coleman v. McAnulty, 16 Mo. 173; Reid v ... Holmes, 127 Mass. 326; Myers v. McRay, 114 Mo ... 377. (2) The circuit court is a court of general jurisdiction ... and however erroneous ... ...
  • Beacon Trust Co. v. Wright
    • United States
    • United States State Supreme Judicial Court of Massachusetts Supreme Court
    • September 15, 1934
    ...may be obviated by entering judgment nunc pro tunc as of the date of the finding. Kelley v. Riley, 106 Mass. 339, 8 Am. Rep. 336;Reid v. Holmes, 127 Mass. 326;Perkins v. Perkins, 225 Mass. 392, 396, 114 N. E. 713;DeMarco v. Pease, 253 Mass. 499, 505, 149 N. E. 208. Exceptions ...
  • Elliott v. Bastian
    • United States
    • Utah Supreme Court
    • June 17, 1895
    ...16 Ore. 211, 17 P. 867; Jennings v. Simpson , 12 Neb. 558, 11 N.W. 880; McCormick v. Paddock, 20 Neb. 486, 30 N.W. 602; Reid v. Holmes, 127 Mass. 326; Tapley v. Martin, 116 Mass. 275; Orleans v. Gaines's Adm'r, 138 U.S. 595, 11 S.Ct. 428, 34 L.Ed. 1102. And this view is strengthened by the ......
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