Tyne v. Dougherty
Tyne v. Dougherty
Opinion of the Court
The defendant has moved to dismiss the bill for want of equitjv on its face.
The bill alleges that on October 31, 1866, one T. Bays recovered a judgment before a justice of the peace against Dennis Connor for $109 and costs, of which judgment the defendant is the owner; that it appears on the docket of the said justice that complainant is the stayor; but complainant avers that he never stayed the judgment, or signed his name as stayor, or ever authorized any one to enter his name as stayor, or acknowledged it afterwards, and he denies that he is in any manner, shape, or form bound as
The defendant’s counsel does not deny that the complainant was entitled to be relieved against liability as stayor, upon the facts alleged, but insists that the proceedings stated to have been taken before the justice were coram non judice, and void; that the defendant has lost his remedy by laches ; and that, the whole cause having been transferred to the Circuit Court by the removal of the papers to that court, for the condemnation of the land levied on, the remedy is by supersedeas of the execution at law.
It is true that the proceedings, whatever they were, which the complainant may have taken to test- the question of his liability before the justice were probably without any warrant of law, and therefore void. But if the plaintiff in the judgment were a party to these proceedings, and acquiesced in the finding, so as to mislead the complainant, such action on his part would excuse the complainant’s delay in resorting to his legal remedy. The bill does not
The objection to the jurisdiction of this court is based upon the assumption that the Circuit Court, by the transfer of the papers under the proceedings for the condemnation of the land, acquired entire jurisdiction of- the cause; and upon the further assumption that, law and equity having concurrent jurisdiction to grant relief, the court first acquiring jurisdiction must decide. But the jurisdiction of the Circuit Court is based upon the complainant’s liability as-stayor, — not for the purpose of testing that liability. Besides, even if the defect in the judgment were apparent on its face, and the remedy, therefore, plain at law, it has been held that the party may come into equity. Oaruthers v. Hartsfield, 3 Yerg. 366. And if the defect does not appear on the face of the proceedings, the jurisdiction to grant relief is perhaps exclusively in equity. Ridgeway v. Bank of Tennessee, 11 Humph. 523, 526; Bell v. Williams, 4 Sneed, 196, 199. And if the defect be one which can be made available at law, it can only be by a certiorari which carries up the judgment for consideration, and not by a certiorari to quash the execution. Mason v. Westmoreland, 1 Head, 555. Such a certiorari must be applied for within the time prescribed for taking up judgments in that mode. Id.; Arnold v. Embree, Peck, 134. If this time be allowed to pass, the only remedy is in equity, save in certain exceptional cases. Wolf v. Eakerly, 10 Heisk. 124; Clark v. Stroud, 1 Swan, 274; Smith v. Wallace, 4 Yerg. 372; Stump v. Shepard, Cooke, 190. A certiorari to quash the execution, while it might lie, would still leave the judgment in force. Mabry v. The State, 9 Yerg. 207; Bartlett v. Wilkerson, cited in King’s Dig., sec. 11,208. The motion must be disallowed.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.