Heirmann v. Stricklin
Heirmann v. Stricklin
Opinion of the Court
delivered the ópinioñ of the court.
The judgment rendered by the justice of the peace on the twenty-eighth day of May, 1881, for the sum of $93 was not void. The process was shown to have been personally served on the defendant M. E. Stricklin, and W. L. Stricklin appeared and contested plaintiff’s demand. The judgment for $150.75, rendered on the twenty-fifth day of June, 1881, was void. It was a judgment by default at the return term, on service of process which is not shown to have been personal. The return was “ executed,” and while this return imports a legal service of the writ in some one of the ways provided by statute, it does not indicate whether it was personal or constructive, and it is only when it “ shall appear that the process has been served personally on the" defendant,” that a judgment by default may be entered at the return term. Code of 1880, sect. 1703. A judgment rendered in violation of the express prohibition of the statute is void. Betts v. Baxter, 58 Miss. 329. The chancellor erred in granting the relief prayed by complainant, and in sustaining the demurrer to the defendants’ cross-bill. The valid judgment for $93 was duly enrolled before the conveyances from the judgment-debtors to E. E. Brown and from E. E. Brown to complainant were filed for x-ecord. If these conveyances were bona fide,
The decree on final hearing and the decree sustaining the demurrer to the cross-bill are reversed. The demurrer is overruled and the complainant allowed thirty days after the mandate shall have been filed in the court below to answer the cross-bill.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Heirmann & Kahn v. A. J. Stricklin
- Cited By
- 3 cases
- Status
- Published
- Syllabus
- 1. Judgment. Service of process. Appearance. A judgment against two parties is valid, if one is served personally and the other appears and contests the demand of the plaintiff, before the justice of the peace, and it cannot be avoided by a collateral attack. 2. Same. Return of “ executed.” Effect thereof. A judgment in a justice’s court, by default at the return term, is void if based on the return “executed,” which shows a legal service, but not necessarily a personal one. Code 1880, sect. 1703; Betts v. Baxter, 68 Miss. 329. 3. Same. Lien. Enrollment. A conveyance by a judgment-debtor of his land is void as against the judgment which was duly enrolled before the filing for record of the conveyance, although it is only a judgment of a justice of the peace. 4. Chancery Practice. Cross-bill. Demurrer. Fraud. If the creditor, whose judgment is enjoined as void, alleges by cross-bill that the conveyance by the judgment-debtor to the complainant, which his debt ante-dates, is fraudulent, this cross-bill must be answered. 5. Mortgage. Parol evidence to show intent of deed. Code 1880, sect. 1299, prohibiting parol evidence to prove an absolute conveyance to be a mortgage, is applicable only where the vendor parts with the possession of the property conveyed. 6. Same. Fraud. Whether this statute (Code 1880, sect. 1299) could be invoked to protect and cover up a fraud. Qwcere?