McDonald v. McAlily
McDonald v. McAlily
Opinion of the Court
An analysis of fhe bill of complaint shows that complainants rely upon four distinct grounds as bases for the nullification of the decree of the probate court allotting a homestead in fee simple to the widow, Mrs. S. A. Dickson:.
(1) A fraud was practiced on the widow herself, in that she was persuaded to lend the use of her name as petitioner in a proceeding, the nature of which she was-too ignorant or feeble-minded to understand, and leading to the appropriation to herself in fee-simple of property which she did not wish nor intend to take from these complainants, to whom it would have otherwise descended.
(2) A fraud was practiced on the court in thus presenting as a bona fide petitioner one who was not so in fact.
(3) A fraud was practiced on the court, and likewise on complainants, in that the petitioner, or her agent McAlily, knowingly and intentionally included in the sworn petition the false statement that the decedent’s homestead was not worth in excess of $2,000.
(4) The decree, though rendered by the probate court, is invalid, because it was not signed by the probate judge, but by the chief clerk in his name.
“Fraud without damage is not a cause of action at law, or a ground of relief in equity. It *107 is only when the two meet and concur that courts intervene.” Bishop v. Wood, 59 Ala. 253, 259.
2. It has been held that a judgment in personam may be set aside at the suit of the plaintiff on the ground that the suit was brought by an attorney who was not authorized to do so. Smyth v. Balch, 40 N. H. 363; Latimer v. Latimer, 22 S. C. 257; Lillibridge v. Ross, 59 Mo. 217. This is, of course, on the theory that such a judgment is a fraud upon the plaintiff, and is in some way injurious to him. But we are clear to the conclusion that that principle of relief, even at the suit of the plaintiff, is not applicable to such a proceeding as this, in rem and ex parte, when the widow so entitled has actually signed the petition which initiated the proceeding, and made oath to the truth of its allegations, for the purpose of asserting some sort of statutory right to the homestead, oven though she did not understand its nature or effect, and that is all that this bill can be construed as averring. A fortiori, third persons, though their rights as heirs may be incidentally affected, cannot question the petitioner’s want of understanding and intent in a collateral attack on the decree, whether as a fraud on themselves or as a fraud on the court.
To allow any one other than the plaintiff or petitioner to come in and question in an independent proceeding the intention of such plaintiff or petitioner with respect' to his initiation and prosecution of the cause — in short, to contradict the showing of the record that he was before the court as actor— would, we think, be destructive of the stability and value of judgments, and would be unsound in policy and injurious in results.
It is, of course, clear that no fraud practiced by McAlily on Mrs. Dickson, whether in the initiation of the proceeding for allotment, or thereafter in the procurement from her of a deed to the homestead property, can be availed of by these complainants. If by deceit she was induced to assert and secure a valuable right conferred upon her by law, this was not, in any cognizable legal sense, a wrong to them. And if, having secured the homestead so allotted, she was induced by a further and grosser fraud to convey it to McAlily, this also was not -a wrong to complainants, who were not of her blood, and could not become her heirs.
Nor could McAlily’s design to secure the property for himself, by an ultimate fraud to be practiced on Mrs. Dickson, add any weight or quality to other acts designed to place the title in her, so as to render fraudulent as to complainants what would not be so of its own force and effect.
We are constrained to the conclusion that the bill is without equity, and that the demurrers to the bill, original and as amended,' were properly sustained. The decree will' therefore be affirmed.
Affirmed.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- McDonald Et Al. v. McALILY Et Al.
- Cited By
- 7 cases
- Status
- Published