Fricks v. Miller
Fricks v. Miller
Opinion of the Court
By the Court.—
delivering the opinion.
The judgment against (Collins and the other officers was obtained in 1866, after the Courts of this State, recognized by the Government of the United States, had been opened, in which the .defendants 'would have been heard to set up the illegality of the consideration of the note. If they 'desired to defend on that ground, it was their duty to make the defence before (judgment. Having failed to do so, we think they are not now entitled to go behind the judgment to allege the illegality of the consideration of the contract, and that they could only have opened it within twelve months after the adoption of our present constitution, for fraud, illegality, or error of law, 'in procuring the judgment.
If the suit had been brought in the Courts during the war upon such a note, and judgment had been rendered upon it, we are not prepared to say the same rule would apply. The Courts as then organized would not have heard such a defense, as they would have been bound to hold the consideration a legal one: and in such a case, we think the defendant might have moved to open the judgment, at any time before the expiration of the year, after the adoption of the Constitution, for the purpose of showing the illegality of the consideration. But no such reason applies where the suit was brought in the Courts, since the war, as no such rule of public policy then excluded the defense.
*We hold that the judgment against Collins and others, which it was the duty of Miller, the defendant, to pay, is a sufficient consideration to support the note, given in
Judgment reversed.
Concurring Opinion
concurring.
This was a suit on a promissory note .made by the defendants on the 4th of November, 1866, for $175 00, due the 1st of August, after date. It appears from the evidence in the record, that in the year 1862, Captain Collins and others, purchased a horse of the plaintiff for the defendant’s son to ride as a member of a cavalry company in the late war,--and gave their note for the horse, that the plaintiff knew for what purpose the horse was purchased, that the defendant’s son died, and after his death, the horse was turned over to the defendant, who sold him for more than the plaintiff got for him. After the war, the plaintiff sued Collins and the other makers of the note given for the horse, and obtained judgment thereon in 1866. The note now sued on, was given by the defendant in payment of that judgment to the plaintiff, and the question is, whether that judgment constituted a legal and valid consideration for the note, or in other words, whether the defendant can be allowed to go behind that judgment, and show that the consideration on which ; it was founded was illegal, as a defense to the note given to the plaintiff therefor. Judgments are the sentence of the law, *pronounced by the Court/ upon the matter contained in the record. Final judgments are such as at once put an end to the action, by declaring that the plaintiff has either entitled himself, or has not, to recover the remedy he sues for: 3 Bl. Com., 305, 307. The 3519th section of the Code declares, that the judgment of a Court of competent jurisdiction, is conclusive between parties and privies, as to the facts which it decides, until reversed or set aside. The judgment of a Court of .competent jurisdiction cannot be collaterally attacked in any other Court, for irregularity, but shall be taken and held as a valid judgment, until it is reversed or set aside, and such judgment cannot be set aside, either in a Court of law or .equity, unless it be for fraud, accident or mistake, or the acts of the adverse party, unmixed with the negligence, or fault of the party complaining, Code: 3535, 3537. The defendants in that judgment do
Reference
- Full Case Name
- MICHAEL FRICKS, in error v. ARCHIBALD MILLER, in error
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- 1 case
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- Published