Pinnell v. Burroughs

Walker, J.,

after stating the facts: We are of the opinion that there was error in the ruling of the court. It may be conceded that there is no connection between Jackson Pinnell and Willis Lloyd, and in the view taken by us of the case it was not necessary that it should have been shown. The object of the defendants was not to prove that the heir's of Jackson Pinnell had lost the title, which it is alleged had descended to *318them, by a sale of the land under the decree of the court in the suit by the executor of Willis Lloyd, but to show that the plaintiffs in this action were parties, as defendants and as heirs of Willis Lloyd, in the proceeding brought by the executor of Willis Lloyd to have the land sold for the payment of his debts. If they were parties to the latter suit, they are bound and concluded by the judgment rendered therein, and it can make no difference whether they acquired title to the land as the heirs of Jackson Pinnell or as heirs of Willis Lloyd, as they are estopped by the judgment without regard to the source from which they may have derived title. If they had any other right or title to the land at the time they were called upon to answer the complaint, they should have disclosed it, and pleaded it, and having failed to do so, they are concluded by the judgment as to the title, which was alleged to have been in Willis Lloyd, and will not be heard to aver against it in this action. Armfield v. Moore, 44 N. C., 157; Carter v. White, 134 N. C., 474; Gregory v. Pinnix, 158 N. C., 147. The Court, in Owens v. Needham, 160 N. C., 381, quoting from and approving Coltrane v. Laughlin, 157 N. C., 287, held it to be a well recognized doctrine here and elsewhere that “when a court having jurisdiction of the cause and the parties renders judgment therein, it estops the parties and their privies as to all issuable matter contained in the pleadings, and though not issuable in the technical sense, it concludes, among other things, as to all matters within the scope of the pleadings which are material and relevant and were in fact investigated and determined on the hearing,” citing Gillam v. Edmonson, 154 N. C., 127; Tyler v. Capeheart, 125 N. C., 64; Tuttle v. Harrell, 85 N. C., 456; Fayerweather v. Ritch, 195 U. S., 277; Aurora City v. West, 74 U. S., 82, 103; Chamberlain v. Gaillard, 26 Ala., 504; 23 Oye., pp. 1502-4-6. It was stated again, and applied to a proceeding for the sale of land for assets, in Smith v. Huffman, 132 N. C., 600. One question involved directly in a proceeding to sell lands for assets is the intestate’s ownership of the land, and if he -is not the owner and any other party to the record is the owner or has an interest therein which would be prejudiced by a decree which does not recognize and protect it, he is estopped so long as the decree stands unreversed, and the doctrine is said to be founded on the principles of justice and fair dealing, as we find declared in the foregoing cases. The party is estopped for the reason, in part, that he has been delinquent, as he had his day in court and a fair opportunity to assert his right, which he deliberately failed to do, and he will not afterwards be heard to call the matter in question, for the law does not permit the same question to be again litigated under such circumstances. If it did, there never would be an end to controversy. The parties* to the proceeding entitled Hunter, executor of Willis Lloyd, v. Willis A. J. Pinnell and others are estopped as to the right and title being in *319tbe intestate, Willis Lloyd. Bnt who were the parties ? It is not necessary to inquire beyond the fact that Willis A. J. Pinnell, who is a party, as plaintiff, in this action, was one of them, for the court directed a verdict against the defendants, and if they are entitled to recover an interest in the land, in any view of the case, his direction was erroneous. This brings us to the consideration of the next question.

We must take it that the records of the court had been lost or destroyed, because the court refused to consider the deed or its recitals as evidence of title, even if they had been lost. The statute, Eevisal, sec. 341, makes the recital of an executor, administrator, or commissioner for the sale of land "prima, facie evidence of the existence, validity, and binding force of the decree, order, judgment, or other record, referred to or recited in said deed,” where the record or files containing the original entries and papers have been lost or destroyed. Isler v. Isler, 88 N. C., 576; Hare v. Holloman, 94 N. C., 14; Everett v. Newton, 118 N. C., 919. The statute also makes the said deed, record, and decree valid and binding as to all persons mentioned or described therein, and who were parties or purported to be parties thereto. Chief Justice Smith said, in Hare v. Holloman, supra, that “The rule is indispensable when, as in the present case, the original papers in the cause have been lost or destroyed.” If the decree or judgment is to be taken as prima facie valid, as the statute provides, this necessarily implies that the proper parties were made defendants by service of process, voluntary appearance, or otherwise, because it could not be valid unless the court had jurisdiction of the cause and the parties, which is prerequisite to its validity. Kello v. Maget,, 18 N. C., 414. The recitals are sufficient to justify the inference, by the aid of the statute, that all proper steps were regularly taken for the sale of the land, and we have often held that such a record cannot be attacked collaterally. Apparently the heirs of Willis Lloyd were made parties, as the ease could not proceed without them, and Willis A. J. Pinnell is one of them, which, with the facts stated and admitted in the first sections of the complaint and answer, gives rise to the presumption, prima facie, at least, that “the others mentioned in the deed were his heirs, as they are the brothers and sisters of Willis A. J. Pin-nell, all being children of JacksoU Pinnell.”

The rule as to attacking records is well stated by Justice Reade in Doyle v. Brown, 72 N. C., 393: “Where a defendant has never been served with process, nor appeared in person or by attorney, a judgment against him is not simply voidable, but void; and it may be so treated whenever and wherever offered, without any direct proceedings to vacate it. And the reason is that the want of service of process and the want of appearance is shown by the record itself, whenever it is offered. It would be otherwise if the record showed service of process or appear-*320anee, when in fact there had been none. In such case the judgment would be apparently regular, and would be conclusive until by a direct proceeding for the purpose it would be vacated. A plaintiff needs not to be brought into court; he comes in. A judgment is of no force against a person as plaintiff unless the. record shows him to be plaintiff. If the record shows him to be plaintiff when in fact he was not, then it stands, as where the record shows one to be defendant when he was not. In both cases the record is conclusive until corrected by a direct proceeding for that purpose.” And this rule has been followed ever since in all the cases upon the subject. Barefoot v. Musselwhite, 153 N. C., 208; Cooke v. Cooke, 164 N. C., 287. Discussing the validity of judgments, with special reference to proceedings for the sale of land, Chief Justice Smith said, in Sumner v. Sessoms, 94 N. C., 376: “It is true, the record produced does not show that notice was served on the infant or upon her guardian ad litem, nor does the contrary appear in the record, which, so far as we have it, is silent on the point. The jurisdiction is presumed to have been acquired by the exercise of it, and if not, the judgment must stand and cannot be treated as a nullity until so declared in some impeaching proceeding instituted and directed to that end. The irregularity, if such there be, may be such as to warrant, in this mode, a judgment declaring it null; but it remains in force until this is done.” This doctrine was approved in Rackley v. Roberts, 147 N. C., 201; Hargrove v. Wilson, 148 N. C., 439; Burgess v. Kirby, 94 N. C., 575; and has been recognized in other cases too numerous to be mentioned. Some of. the more important ones will be found in the last two cases above cited.

By his remark, that the proof which defendant proposed to offer, as to the loss of the record, would not avail them by making the recitals in the deed evidence of their title to the land, the presiding judge prevented the defendants from developing their case and made their defeat a certainty. They were not required to do the vain thing of going on with their proof, if indeed they had any more or needed it. The ruling was fatal to their case, and they did well to desist. The ruling was error, as also was the peremptory instruction to find for the plaintiff.

The plaintiffs may by a direct proceeding in the original cause correct the record if it fails to speak the truth, but cannot assail it collaterally in this action. They may be barred of any remedy by the long delay, or for other reason; but we do not decide as to this, the facts not being now before us. If a judgment is irregular, a court will not always set it aside, and have declined to do so when the rights of bona fide purchasers for value and without notice of the irregularities would be prejudiced. Matthews v. Joyce, 85 N. C., 264; Sutton v. Schonwald, 86 N. C., 198; England v. Garner, 90 N. C., 197; Harrison v. Hargrove, 120 N. C., 96; Rackley v. Roberts, supra; Yarborough v. Moore, 151 N. C., 116. We *321cannot too often repeat wbat was said by tbe Court in Sutton v. Schonwald, supra, as to tbe necessity of safeguarding tbe integrity of judicial sales, after tbey bad stated tbat tbis wholesome doctrine is founded upon public policy, as well as tbe principles of equity: “Purchasers should be able to rely upon tbe judgments and decrees of tbe courts of tbe country, and though aware of their liability to be reversed, yet tbey have a right, so long as tbey stand, to presume tbat tbey have been rightly and regularly rendered, and tbey are not expected to take notice of the errors of tbe court or tbe laches of parties. A contrary doctrine would be fatal to judicial sales and tbe values of title derived under them, as no one would buy at prices at all approximating tbe true value of property if be supposed tbat bis title might at some distant day be declared void because of some irregularity in tbe proceeding altogether unsuspected by him and of which be bad not opportunity to inform himself. Under tbe operation of tbis rule occasional instances of hardship may occur, but a different one would much more certainly result in mischievous consequences and tbe general sacrifice of property sold by order of tbe court.”

Tbe recitals in tbe deed of Henry B. Hunter, executor, to John H. Burroughs are as explicit as those in tbe deed which was tbe subject of consideration in Hare v. Holloman, supra, and, as held in tbat case, are prima facie adequate to sustain tbe action of tbe court. Irvin v. Clark, 98 N. C., 437. Tbey are fuller- and more definite than some recitals which have been held sufficient to show tbe validity of titles acquired at judicial sales.

There must be a new trial because of tbe error committed by tbe court in its ruling upon tbe legal force and effect of tbe deed as evidence. It may be tbat tbe defendants, who are tbe heirs of J. H. Burroughs, purchaser at tbe sale, will be able to prove more clearly, at tbe next trial, tbat tbe other defendants in tbe former suit, besides Willis A. J. Pinnell, were tbe heirs of Willis Lloyd.

New trial.