Wallace v. Schneider
Wallace v. Schneider
Opinion of the Court
Wallace sued the Schneiders to recover upon a Kentucky judgment obtained against them in the Franklin *334 quarterly court of Franklin county, Ky., in the year 1908, for the sum of $152.76, 6 per cent, .interest, and. costs of suit. Upon recovery in the justice court the defendants appealed to the county court, and answered that plaintiff did not have a valid and subsisting judgment against them. The county court found that the judgment was not a valid, binding, and subsisting judgment against the defendants, for the reason that it is not shown to be one that could have been enforced “at this time, under the laws of the state of Kentucky.”
The Franklin quarterly court of Kentucky is a court of limited jurisdiction. The plaintiff proved by the judge of that court that he had examined the docket, and in his testimony describing the judgment he attached a correct compared copy of the same to his deposition. That part of the judgment we are concerned with reads:
“This cause coming on for hearing, by agreement the matters of law and fact were submitted to the court, and, the court being sufficiently advised, it is adjudged that the plaintiff recover of the defendants, Alex Schneider and Lena Schneider, the sum of $152.76, with interest thereon at the rate of 6 per cent, per annum from July 27, 1908, until paid, and for the costs herein expended.”
He also proved by the statute of Kentucky the judicial character of the quarterly courts of that state, their jurisdiction in civil cases, and other features in connection therewith unnecessary to mention.
The case of Beal v. Smith, 14 Tex. 307-311, opinion by Justice Wheeler, exhibits the extent of proof in complying with the full faith and credit clause as to the judgment of another state where it is rendered by a court of limited jurisdiction. He had under consideration a judgment rendered in a justice court in the state of Georgia. He said:
“In order, therefore, to show what effect was given to those judgments by the local law, and consequently, what faith and credit or what effect would be given to them in this state, it was necessary to have produced and proved the statute by which their jurisdiction and powers were conferred.”
'JETe suggests that, if a justice court in the state of Georgia were elevated to the character and dignity of courts of record, a different question would have been presented, meaning, of course, the transcript of the judgment of a court of general jurisdiction would prove itself. The Supreme Court bases its opinion in that case upon the case-of Thomas v. Robinson, 3 Wend. 268, by the then Supreme Court of New Fork. Judge Sutherland said in that case that, if the statute of Pennsylvania were produced showing the creation of the justice courts of that state, and, if the statute also “showed that the subject-matter of the suit was within the jurisdiction of a justice’s court, and the proceedings appeared from the record to have-been in conformity with the directions of the statute, then it would be entitled here [New Fork] to full faith and credit.”
Justice Gray of the Supreme Court of the United States, in the case of Hanley v. Donoghue, 116 U. S. 5, 6 Sup. Ct. 244, 29 L. Ed. 537, in speaking of the full faith and credit clause of the Constitution, as well as the act of Congress, said that, if an authenticated judgment “appears upon its face-to be a record of a court of general jurisdiction, the jurisdiction of the court over the cause and the parties is to be presumed unless disproved by extrinsic evidence or by the record itself.”
The county court was wholly wrong in the rendition of its judgment in this cause, and on account of the uncontradicted nature of: *335 tile proof, as well as the improbability of any character of defense that could be legally adduced- against it, we reverse and render the judgment, and render such judgment as the county court should have rendered,, in the cause; that is, for the amount of the foreign judgment, the interest thereon, and the certified costs in said cause.
Reversed and rendered.
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