The respondent and plaintiff in the action, out of which this case arises, claims title to the premises in controversy, by purchase at a judicial sale of the property, under an order, made by the United States District Court for the District of California, on January 28th, 1873, authorizing the assignee in bankruptcy of the estate of the Sutter Canal and Mining Company—a bankrupt corporation—to sell all the right, title, and interest of the estate in the property, subject to two mortgages which the defendant Mitchell had upon it.
Under that order the premises in dispute, known as the “ Butte Ditch or Canal,” were sold to the respondent by the assignee, on July 17th, 1873, “subject to said mortgages.” The sale was confirmed on August 6th, 1873, by the United States District Court; and the assignee was directed to execute and deliver to the respondent, as purchaser, a proper conveyance of the property—the “Butte Canal”—which was done, on October 18th, 1873, in pursuance of the orders of sale and confirmation.
When the respondent purchased the property, it took whatever title it acquired “ subject to the mortgages” of the appellant, Mitchell, and with notice that an action was then pending in the District Court of Amador County for the foreclosure of those mortgages. For Mitchell had commenced an action to foreclose on April 6th, 1870, by filing his complaint in the District Court of Amador County, and issuing a summons thereon against the mortgagors, namely: William Stickles, C. D. Horn, A. M. Harris, and Isaac and G. S. Tripp, composing a copartnership, known as the Butte Ditch Company, and Joseph Baptiste and William Wells; and, at the time of filing *174the complaint, he also caused to he filed and recorded, in the office of the County Recorder of Amador County, a notice of lis pendens, according to law.
The mortgages upon which that action was commenced were given by the defendants named in the complaint of foreclosure, to secure payment to Mitchell of two promissory notes for the sum of six thousand dollars, upon the following described property:
“1. The Butte Ditch, commencing at the Old Pine Log crossing on the North Fork of the Mokelumne River, conveying water thence to Slabtown, Butte City, and other localities in said Amador County; also to the vicinity of Jackson, Scottsville, and other points in said Amador County.
“2. That other ditch known as the Upper Kellum Ditch, taking water from the South Fork of Jackson Creek, opposite to said Slabtown, and conveying it thence to the vicinity of said Butte City and other points in said Amador county, and being about five miles in length.
“3. That other ditch, known as the Lower Kellum Ditch, taking water from said South Fork of Jackson Creek, at a point below the head of the last-mentioned ditch, and conveying the same to the vicinity of said Butte City and other points in said Amador county.
“4. That other ditch known as the Middle Fork Kellum Ditch, taking water from the middle fork of said Jackson Creek, about a half a mile below Irishtown, and conveying it to said Butte City and other points in said county. Together with all the flumes, aqueducts, branch ditches, reservoirs, pipes, and cabins connected with all of the ditch property above mentioned.”
Pending that action the mortgagors, or some of them, on July 15 th, 1870, sold and conveyed the first portion of said mortgage premises, viz., the “ Butte Ditch”—the premises in controversy—to one Bowman in part consideration of his assumption of, and agreement to pay, the Mitchell mortgages, within thirty days from the sale; and Bowman afterward, on July -16th, 1870, sold and conveyed the same property to the Sutter Canal and Mining Company. At the time that the Company purchased the “ ditch,” one of their directors .knew of the agreement by Bowman to pay off the mortages *175upon the property; and the same fact was known to the President of the respondent when he purchased the property, for the respondent, at the assignee’s sale. Bowman, however, failed to pay; and in March, 1872, the Sutter Canal and Mining Company was, by decree of the United States District Court, declared a bankrupt; and an assignee was appointed, to whom, on May 2d, 1872, an assignment was made of all the property of the bankrupt, including the “ Butte Ditch.”
Pending the proceedings in bankruptcy, Mitchell was advised that it was necessary for him to present a claim upon the mortgages, against the estate in bankruptcy of the company, to the United States District Court for allowance. Acting upon that advice he did present to that Court his promissory notes and the mortgages given to secure payment thereof, and his claim was indorsed “ recognized and allowed.” But, afterward, becoming satisfied that he had been improperly advised, he petitioned the Court, in which the claim had been allowed, for leave to withdraw it, and to proceed with his foreclosure suit to judgment and sale; and, on December 20, 1872, the Court granted his petition by the following order, viz.:
“It is, on motion of Messrs. Higby & Seely, attorneys for said Mitchell, the attorneys for the other parties respectively having been heard, ordered that said Thomas Mitchell have leave, and leave is hereby granted to him, to foreclose the two mortgages owned and held by him, mentioned in the petition filed in this Court by him on the 26th day of November, A. D. 1872; and that the assignee in this proceeding be made a party defendant in said foreclosure suit; and that the Kellum ditches mentioned in said Mitchell mortgages, and all property connected or in any way belonging thereto, be first sold before proceeding to sell the property mentioned in said mortgages in which said bankrupt has an interest; and that said Mitchell be permitted to deduct from the proceeds of said sale a sum sufficient to pay the balance due on said mortgages according to the terms and conditions thereof; and that the moneys realized from the sale of said Kellum ditches and property connected therewith be first applied toward the payment of said amount, and if the proceeds of the sale of *176all of said property should be in excess of the amount due the said Mitchell as aforesaid, then that the overplus, if any there be, shall be deposited in this Court to the credit of said bankrupt estate.”
After the entry of that order, Mitchell, on September 8, 1873, filed a supplemental complaint in the foreclosure proceedings, to which the assignee in bankruptcy was not made a party, and caused a summons to be issued thereon against the defendants named in the original complaint, which was served upon them; and they appeared in the action and filed a motion to dismiss the action for want of diligence in its prosecution. But, pending that motion, they and Mitchell stipulated that the motion shall be withdrawn; that Mitchell shall take judgment for the foreclosure and sale of the “Butte Canal” only; that the other ditches, known as the Kellum ditches, shall be released from the lien of the mortgages; and that no judgment over for deficiency shall be entered or enforced against the defendants. In pursuance of that stipulation, judgment was entered on October 13, 1873, for the foreclosure of the mortgages and the sale of the “Butte Canal” to satisfy the mortgage debt, under which the property was sold and transferred to Mitchell; and the respondent who had purchased at the sale of the assignee in bankruptcy, now claims in this action, that the certificate of purchase issued to Mitchell is void and should be canceled, and that the sale of the premises, under the judgment of foreclosure, is also void, and should be set aside, because the judgment was taken in fraud of the rights of the assignee in bankruptcy, and also in fraud of the rights of the respondent, and in violation of the order of the United States District Court of December 20, 1872. Therefore, he asks that the certificate of purchase be canceled; that the sale be set aside, and that the judgment of foreclosure be vacated and annulled.
But the order of December 20th, 1872, was an act of supererogation ; it was wholly unnecessary under the bankrupt law to enable Mitchell to proceed with his foreclosure suit to judgment and sale. The suit was pending in a court of competent iurisdiction, and Mitchell was entitled as matter of right to prosecute it without any order from any other Court. 1ST either *177the jurisdiction of the Court nor the right of Mitchell was in any way affected by the order of the 20th of December, 1872. As Mr. Justice Miller remarks in Eyster v. Gaff, 91 U. S. 524: “ The Court had acquired jurisdiction of the parties, and of the subject-matter of the suit. It was competent to administer full justice. * *' * It could not take judicial notice of the proceedings in bankruptcy in another Court, however seriously they might have affected the rights of parties to the suit already pending. It was the duty of the Court to proceed to a decree as between the parties before it, until by some proper pleadings in the case it was informed of the changed relations of any of those parties to the subject-matter of the suit.
“ The opinion seems to have been quite prevalent in many quarters at one time that the moment a man is declared bankrupt, the District Court, which has so adjudged, draws to itself by that act, not only all control of the bankrupt’s property and credits, but that no one can litigate with the assignee contested rights in any other Court, except in so far as the Circuit Courts have concurrent jurisdiction, and that other courts can proceed no further in suits of which they had at that time full cognizance; and it was a prevalent practice to bring any person, who contested with the assignee any matter growing out of disputed rights of property or of contracts, into the bankruptcy court by the service of a rule to show cause and to dispose of their rights in a summary way. This court has steadily set its face against this view.
“ The debtor of a bankrupt, or the man who contests the right to real or personal property with him, loses none of those rights by the bankruptcy of his adversary.” See also, Orton v. Smith, 18 How. 263; Taylor v. Carlyl, 20 id. 596.
The order of the 20th of December, 1872, therefore, imposed upon Mitchell no duty to the bankrupt or its assignee* especially after that order had been, in effect, abrogated by the subsequent order of the same Court, under which the interest of the bankrupt in the property in controversy was sold to the respondent. After that sale and the confirmation thereof the bankrupt had no longer any interest in the property, and the assignee had no longer any duties to perform in *178connection with it, and he was neither a necessary nor a proper party to the pending foreclosure suit. The respondent, as the successor in interest to the bankrupt, was the only party concerned in the suit. But having purchased subject to the mortgages, and with notice of the pendency of the suit to foreclose them, it became bound by the notice to appear in the action and defend the interest which it had acquired, (Corwin v. Bensley, 43 Cal. 259; Eyster v. Gaff, supra) If it neglected that duty, any judgment rendered in the action would bind the estate in the property which was purchased with notice of the action. (Calderwood v. Tevis, 23 Cal. 336; Hurlburt v. Butenop, 27 id. 50.) For a judgment in an action to foreclose a mortgage lien upon land binds all the estate in the land which was held by the parties defendants to the action, at the commencement of the action, or which they or any of them may sell to á third person pendente lite with notice of the action; and they are estopped from questioning it, unless it was taken against them by the mistake, inadvertence, surprise, or excusable neglect of any of the defendants, to whose interest in the mortgage premises, the subsequent purchaser had succeeded; or unless it was taken by collusibn or fraud.
The judgment has never been assailed from within. No application has been made to re-open the case on the grounds of mistake, inadvertence, surprise, or excusable neglect. No motion for a new trial has been made in the case. No appeal has been taken in it. The judgment of foreclosure is therefore binding and conclusive, not only on the respondent, but on any other Court into which it may come, notwithstanding the order of the 20th of December, 1872. “ It is,” says the Supreme Court of the United States, in PecJc v. Jenness, 7 How. 624, “ a doctrine of law, too long established to require the citation of authorities, that where a Court has jurisdiction, it has a right to decide every question which occurs in the cause, and whether its decision be correct or otherwise, its judgment, till reversed, is regarded as binding on every other Court.”
Of course such judgment may be impeachable for fraud and collusion; and the respondent charges that the judgment under consideration was taken in fraud of the rights which *179it acquired in the property, and of the rights of the assignee in bankruptcy. But the Court below found, “that the said Mitchell, in entering into the stipulation for the release of the three Kellum ditches from the foreclosure suit in this Court, had no fraudulent agreement or understanding with any one. That said Mitchell, in entering into said stipulation for the release of said Kellum ditches from the foreclosure suit, was not guilty of any fraud or wrong, except so far as the same was a violation of the order of the United States District Court, made on the 20th of December, 1872, on the motion of said Mitchell.”
This finding leaves the respondent no equity whatever. For judgments are impeachable for those frauds only which are extrinsic to the merits of the case, and by which the Court has been imposed upon or misled into a false judgment. They are not impeachable for frauds relating to the merits between the parties. All mistakes and errors must be corrected from within by motion for a new trial, or to re-open the judgment, or by appeal. In the language of De Grey, Chief Justice, “If the judgment is a direct and decisive sentence upon the point, and, as it stands, to be admitted as conclusive evidence upon the Court, and not to be impeached from within, yet like all other acts of the highest judicial authority, it is impeachable from without. Although it is not permitted to show that the Court was mistaken, it may be shown that they were misled. Fraud is an extrinsic collateral act, which vitiates the most solemn proceedings of courts of justice.” (Duchess of Kingston's Case, 20 Howell’s State Trials, 554.) “ The fraud,” say the Supreme Court of Mew York, “ which will justify equitable interference in setting aside a judgment or decree must be actual and positive, not merely constructive; it must be fraud occurring in the conception or procurement of the judgment or decree which was not known to the party at the time, and for not knowing which he is not chargeable with negligence.” (Ross v. Wood, 70 N. Y. 8.)
Judgment reversed and cause remanded.
Boss, J., and McKinstry, J., concurred.