Callaghan's Adm'r v. Circle

Green, President,

delivered the opinion of the Court:

The first question presented by the record is, have the appellants, creditors of Daniel Circle, and parties to the last of the three suits, that of Alphin v. Circle’s ex’or and others, but not parties to either of the other two suits, any right to appeal from this decree of June 22, 1876, entered in the three suits which were heard together but not consolidated? The cases of Kyle’s ex’or v. Kyle, 1 Gratt. 526, and Hill et ux. v. Proctor, 10 W. Va. 59, show that there are cases in which an appeal may be taken from a decree entered in two cases which have been heard together, by a party to one of the suits, though he was no party to the other suit, and that on suck an appeal in some cases, the whole of the decree is *568properly before this court for review. But in these the subject matter of controversy was the same in 0f sup;S- This was not the case in the three suits heard together in the decree before this Court for review, anq ques^jon presents itself, whether this identity of the subject matter of controversy is essential to give this Court the right to review the whole decree, as is asked in this case, when an appeal is taken by a party to only one of the suits.

The cases of Anderson et al. v. DeSoer, and the same v. Gallegoe’s adm’r et al., 6 Gratt. 363, throw much light on this question. In those cases, on July 24,1819, DeSoer instituted a suit in equity against Grivegnee, a non-resident, attaching certain debts and effects in the hands of Gallegoe’s ex’ors, the home defendants, belonging to Grivegnee ; more than two years afterwards, Anderson, Blair <fe Anderson, instituted a chancery suit in the same court, claiming that these debts and effects belonging to Grivegnee, in the hands of Gallegoe’s ex’ors had, for a valuable consideration, been equitably assigned to them by Grivegnee on the 20th day of July, 1819. This bill makes no allusion to the previous attachment suit of DeSoer, which attached the same effects; nor did the bill of DeSoer make any allusion to the assignment to Anderson, Blair & Anderson; nor were the plaintiffs in either of these suits made defendants in the other. These causes were heard together, and in February, 1841, the court rendered a decree against Grivegnee in favor of each of the plaintiffs, for their debts respectively, and made a decree against the representatives of Gallegoe’s ex’ors, giving to the plaintiffs respectively, their ratable proportion of the fund in their hands belonging to Grivegnee. On an appeal by Anderson, Blair & Anderson from this decree, which was entered in the two suits, they being heard together, the court was of the opinion, that to the extent of the equitable assignment to Anderson, Blair & Anderson, they had priority of claim, and said decree, so far as it directed a *569ratable division of tbe funds in the hands of the representatives of Gallegoe’s executors, was reversed. Judge Allen in delivering the opinion of the court says : '‘That as the decree in this cause, though pronounced in different cases, was a decree disposing oi the subject to which conflicting claims were set up, and so far as the attaching creditors were concerned, the jurisdiction attached in consequence of the subject being under the control of the court it where by a decree rendered m all the cases the subject is disposed of, any of the parties injured by such disposition of the subject, have a right to appeal from the decrees ; and such appeal brings up the whole decree disposing of the subject for revision, to which all the other claimants interested in such disposition, though their claims have been asserted by distinct bills, are parties.” This decision is based on a much broader ground than that of Kyle v. Kyle, 1 Gratt., and seems to establish the position that if several suits are brought for the same subject matter or to charge the same subject matter with several debts or claims and these suits being in the same court are heard together and a decree is rendered disposing of the subject matter, any of the plaintiffs in the several suits claiming the subject matter or a right to subject it to the payment of his debt, has a right to take an appeal from such decree, though neither plaintiff was a defendant in the other suit; and that such appeal brings up the whole decree for revision. The case before us falls within this principle. The plaintiff in the case of John Callaghan’s adm’r v. Daniel Circle’s ex’or and heirs, sought to subject the five hundred and eighty-five acre tract to the payment of the unpaid purchase money as a vendor’s lien thereon. The plaintiff in the last suit, George Alphin v. Daniel Circle’s ex’or et al., sought to subject this same tract of land to the payment of a judgment lien held by the plaintiff. The decree appealed from was a decree in these two causes and a third which were heard together and it disposes of this five hundred and eighty-five acres of land, *570and therefore the plaintiffs in either of said suits can appeal from this decree.

The next enquiry is, was this decree erroneous? The appellants in their petition, assign six errors in this decree. We cannot properly consider any of these errors, or express any opinion on the merits of these causes, because in my judgment when this decree of June 22, 1876, was rendered, two of these causes were in such a condition that the court could properly render no decree in them. In the case of John Callaghan’s adm’r. v. Daniel Circle, the sole defendant, Daniel Circle, had Syllabus 2 been dead more than a year; and while his death had never been suggested in this case, yet the decree appealed from on its face shows that he was dead, and his death had been suggested at the March term, 1875, of the circuit court of Nicholas county in the cause- of Daniel Circle v. John Callaghan’s adm’r, and that cause had been revived by consent, in the name of John E. Circle, executor of Daniel Circle, though not in the name of the widow and heirs of D. Circle. Yet there had been no revival of said first suit, and when the decree complained of was rendered there were no defendants before the court in that cause, unless D. Circle’s executor might be considered so, he having filed a petition for a rehearing; and in the second cause, the only plaintiff before the court at that time, was the personal representative of D. Circle. It is obvious that the widow and heirs of D. Circle holding the legal title to said five hundred and eighty-five acre tract of land, and having a substantial interest in the controversy, were obviously necessary parties in both said causes; and in their absence, no decree disposing of the subject of controversy in any manner could properly be rendered. In the last cause of Alphin v. D. Circle’s executor and others, the personal representative, widow and heirs of D. Circle were before the court. It is insisted that they being before the court in this last cause, and it being by consent heard with the other two causes, in which they were not before the court, though *571necessary parties in them, that by such consent they waived all right to object to these irregularities having consented to the court’s hearing all three causes on their merits. In the case of Mayo v. Murchie, 3 Munf. 358. John Murchie trustee of the town of Manchester, filed his bill of injunction claiming that he, as trustee of said town, had the equitable title to a piece of land which was a common for the use of the inhabitants of said town, that Mayo who had the legal title to this piece oí land, had brought an action of ejectment against him the object of which was turn him and said inhabitants out of the possession of Said piece of land. The bill prayed an injunction to the prosecution of this suit, that a conveyance of said piece of land be made to him as such trustee, and that he and the inhabitants of said town be quieted in the possession of said piece of land, and for general relief. In May, 1807, the cause came on to be heard by consent of parties, as to the defendant, John Mayo, and the Chancellor perpetuated the injunction and decreed that a conveyance of the legal title be made to the trustee for the use of the town of Manchester, and that the said town be quieted in the possession thereof. Judge Coalter was of opinion that this decree should be reversed, because the town of Manchester was a necessary party and was not before the court when the case was decided. The parties having by consent agreed that this cause should be heard, did not, he thought alter the case, “for whether there be proper parties to a suit or not, does not depend upon the will or election of the suitors, who frequently go to trial (as in this case) without objection.” The other judges who sat in that case, Judges Roane and Fleming, did not concur in this view of Judge Coalter in delivering his opinion. Judge Roane says, while it is entirely admitted that all persons concerned in the demand, made by a bill in equity ought to be parties there is no rule or principle which prohibits the defendant where such parties are really represented with dispensing with the strictness of form. There may be a *572difference between tbe total absence of parties and tbe case where there is a mere defect in the power of the agent, ]10wevcr ease might be, had the appellant stood merely still, or objected at an earlier stage of the case, he uow est0pped by bringing an ejectment against Mur-chie as trustee of the town of Manchester, of which this may be considered a continuation in another form, by his recognizing him as such trustee, in his answer in . ° ° . ’ , , this cause, and by consenting that the cause should be heard as to Mayo, which term heard, undoubtedly meant a trial upon the merits, as contradistinguished from the dilatory exceptions for want of parties. I consider all these acts, and those too in relation to parties who are in fact, though possibly irregularly represented, as amounting to a waiver of the objection on the part of the appellant.”

Judge Fleming says, “It was urged however in argument, that consent cannot give a court jurisdiction ; but a party may undoubtedly, by consent, waive every advantage that might be taken by him of error in form of the proceedings in a court of competent jurisdiction, and rely altogether on the merits of his cause, which is purely what was done in the present case.” It is unnecessary for us to determine whether the majority of the court was right in its views. It is obvious that in that case, they proceeded on the ground that Murchie, the trustee, represented the town of Manchester, and that thus the town of Manchester was before the court when the decree was rendered, and though it might not be properly before the court, yet it was competent for the appellant to waive any objection to the form in which the town of Manchester was thus brought before the court, and that in that case the appellant had done so by several acts, and among others, by consenting that the cause might be heard. But in the cases before us, the widow and heirs of D. Circle were entirely absent in two of these causes, and there is no pretense that there was any kind of representation of them in these two causes, when the *573decree complained of was rendered. And there is nothing in the opinion of the majority of the court in Mayo v. Murchie, from which we conclude that in such a case the mere consent of the appellants parties to a third suit in which all proper parties were before the court, that their cause might be heard with these0 two causes would justify a decree in those causes in which the principal parties in interest were totally absent and unrepresented. Nor would the consent of the widow and heirs of D. Circle, who were before the court in the last suit, that it might be heard with the other two causes, prevent the appellants from insisting that a decree should be rendered only when the absolutely necessary parties were before the court.

I conclude therefore that' the court had no authority to enter up the decree of June 22, 1876, in the absence of all the defendants in the first and principal cause, and as the causes must be remanded to the circuit court to be matured for hearing, it is improper for me in advance of any legal decision of the cause by the circuit court, to express any opinion on its merits

It remains to consider what action this Court should take. The decree of June 22, 1876, is not simply erroneous, but it is absolutely void so far as it effects D. Circle’s heirs and widow, being rendered, when all these defendants in the principal and leading cause were not before the court in that cause. See Requa v. Holmes, 16 N. Y. 123, and same case, 29 N. Y. 338. Still even in such case, it is proper for this Court to reverse such a decree and not dismiss the appeal as an unnecessary proceeding to correct such error. See Monroe et al. v. Bartlett et al., 6 W. Va. 441; and Johnson v. Young, Carson & Bryant, 11 W. Va. 673.

The decree therefore of the circuit court of Green-brier county of date, June 22, 1876, must be reversed and annulled and the cause remanded to that court, with directions before proceeding to render any decree in said causes to have the two first named causes revived against *574ProPer parties, and each of said causes properly mature<^ for hearing, and when so matured, the three causes shall jje iiear(j together, and such other and further proceedings shall be had in them, as are in accordance with jug£joe an(j ^he ruies governing courts of equity. And the appellants must recover of the appellee, Thomas D. Callaghan, administrator, with the will annexed of John Callaghan, to be levied of the assets of his intestate in his hands, to be administered, their costs about their appeal in this Court expended.

The other Judges concurred.

Decree Reversed.