1. An attachment affidavit stating generally the nature of the
plaintiff's claim and setting forth, with reasonable certainty and
the particularity of fact necessary to show a cause of action, the
unpaid judgments upon which the claim was based,
held a
sufficient compliance with the requirement of the West Virginia
Code that such affidavit state "the nature of the plaintiff's
claim." P.
269 U. S.
166.
2. Where a writ of attachment has been issued and levied, the
preliminary affidavit has served its purpose, and even though it be
so defective that an appellate court might find in it sufficient
error to reverse the judgment, this does not deprive the court of
the jurisdiction acquired by the levy of the writ.
Id.
3. Recitals in a decree of sale in a creditors suit showing that
the court acted on satisfactory evidence in adjudging that the
deeds in question were made to defraud creditors import verity, and
cannot be drawn in question in a collateral attack by a party who
was served only by publication and did not appear and who alleges
that the court (under the West Virginia Code) could make no valid
decree because no proof of fraud was offered.
Id.
4. In such a suit, where the court has acquired jurisdiction by
attachment and has entered a decree
nisi on an order of
publication, the allegations of the complaint that the deeds in
question were fraudulent may be sustained by the default as well as
by proof, and failure to hear proof before adjudging them
fraudulent and ordering a sale is neither beyond the court's
jurisdiction nor a denial of due process.
Id.
5. Upon an appeal from a decree dismissing on motion a bill to
set aside a judgment, this Court, finding the judgment valid
against the objections made in the bill, will not consider other
matters relating to it which are urged in the briefs. P.
269 U. S. 167.
Affirmed.
Appeal from a decree of the district court dismissing the bill,
on motion, in a suit to annul proceedings of a West Virginia court
whereby deeds, made by one of the
Page 269 U. S. 164
appellants to the others, were set aside as in fraud of
creditors, and the property sold to satisfy judgment debts.
MR. JUSTICE SANFORD delivered the opinion of the Court.
The appellants brought this suit in equity in the district court
to set aside certain proceedings in a circuit court of West
Virginia whose validity they challenged,
inter alia, for
repugnancy to the due process clause of the Fourteenth Amendment.
The bill was dismissed by the district court, upon defendants'
motion, without opinion. This direct appeal was allowed, March 31,
1924, under § 238 of the Judicial Code.
The case made by the bill and exhibits is this: the plaintiffs
are nonresidents of West Virginia. Four of them claim to be the
owners of certain undivided interests in lands in Nicholas county,
West Virginia, conveyed to them by deeds from their co-plaintiff W.
B. Stephenson, executed in good faith and for valuable
considerations. The defendant Cawley, a creditor of W. B.
Stephenson holding unsatisfied judgments against him, brought a
suit in equity against the plaintiffs in the circuit court of the
county to set aside the deeds as fraudulent and sell the lands to
satisfy the judgments. The plaintiffs were proceeded against as
nonresidents, by an order of publication, without personal service
of process. An order of attachment was also issued and levied upon
the lands. The plaintiffs not having appeared within the time
required by the order of publication, a decree
nisi was
entered and set for hearing, and thereafter a decree was
Page 269 U. S. 165
entered adjudging that the deeds from W. B. Stephenson were made
to defraud his creditors, setting the same aside as to the debt to
Cawley, and directing a sale of the lands in satisfaction of the
judgments. They were purchased by the defendants Kirtley and Herold
at the commissioners' sale. This sale was confirmed by a subsequent
decree, and a deed was executed by the commissioners to the
purchasers, who entered into possession of the lands. The
plaintiffs, who under the laws of West Virginia were allowed to
appear and make defense to the suit within two years from the date
of the final decree, had no knowledge of these proceedings until
after this time had expired.
The bill alleged that these proceedings were null and void: 1st,
because the Circuit Court did not have jurisdiction to enter the
decrees, since under the laws of West Virginia the order of
attachment upon which its jurisdiction depended was void and
conferred no jurisdiction for the reason that the affidavit upon
which it was based lacked the required certainty and was invalid,
and 2nd, because, under the law of West Virginia, there can be no
valid decree in a suit in which no personal service has been had
without proof of the facts upon which it rests, and the court was
without jurisdiction to enter the decree, setting aside the deeds
and ordering the sale, for the reason that no proof was offered
that the deeds were fraudulent.
The bill further alleged that the action of the Circuit Court in
adjudging that the deeds were fraudulent, without personal service
of process or hearing any evidence or having any trial upon the
question, and decreeing the sale of the lands, was a denial of due
process of law to the plaintiffs in violation of the Fourteenth
Amendment, and it prayed that the decrees directing and confirming
the sale of the lands and the commissioners' deed thereto be
decreed to be null and void; that the cloud arising therefrom upon
their title be removed, and that they be adjudged to be the owners
of the lands.
Page 269 U. S. 166
1. Assuming, without deciding, that notwithstanding the
constructive service of process by the order of publication, the
jurisdiction of the court over the lands depended upon the
attachment, we find no invalidity in the affidavit on which the
order of attachment issued. The statute merely requires the
affidavit to state "the nature of the plaintiff's claim." Barnes'
West Virginia Code, ch. 106, § 1, p. 1995. Here, after stating
generally the nature of the claim, it set forth with reasonable
certainty and the particularity of fact necessary to show a cause
of action, the unpaid judgments held by Cawley against W. B.
Stephenson upon which the claim was based. This was sufficient.
Flannigan v. Tie Co., 77 W.Va. 158, 159. Furthermore,
where a writ of attachment has been issued and levied, the
preliminary affidavit has served its purpose, and even though it be
defective and an appellate court might find in it sufficient error
to reverse the judgment, this does not deprive the court of the
jurisdiction acquired by the levy of the writ.
Cooper v.
Reynolds, 10 Wall. 308,
77 U. S. 319;
Ludlow v.
Ramsey, 11 Wall. 581,
78 U. S. 588;
Miller v. White, 46 W.Va. 67, 71;
McIntosh v. Oil
Co., 47 W.Va. 832, 837.
2. It is recited in the decree of sale that it appeared to the
satisfaction of the court "from the papers and evidence" that the
deeds from W. B. Stephenson were made to defraud his creditors. The
present suit is a collateral proceeding to set aside the sale made
by the Circuit Court,
Ludlow v. Ramsey, supra, p.
78 U. S. 587, a
court of general jurisdiction, and the recitals in its decree,
which import verity, cannot be drawn in question herein.
Ballard v. Hunter, 204 U. S. 241,
204 U. S. 265.
Furthermore, as the court had acquired jurisdiction by the levy of
the writ of attachment and a decree
nisi had been entered
upon the order of publication, a failure to hear proof before
adjudging that the deeds were fraudulent and ordering the sale
would neither have deprived the court of its jurisdiction
Page 269 U. S. 167
nor constituted a denial of due process. The allegations of the
complaint might be established either by the introduction of proof
or by admission through the default, and error or irregularity in
this respect would neither constitute ground for setting aside the
decree which the court had acquired jurisdiction to render, nor
take from it the attribute of due process.
Ballard v. Hunter,
supra, pp.
204 U. S. 250,
204 U. S.
258.
3. This disposes of all the grounds upon which the validity of
the proceedings was challenged by the bill. We therefore neither
consider other matters urged in the appellants' brief relating to
the alleged invalidity of the order of publication nor the defense
of good faith purchase relied upon in the brief of appellees. We
find no want of jurisdiction in the circuit court by reason of the
matters alleged in the bill, nor want of due process invalidating
the proceedings under the Fourteenth Amendment.
The decree of the district court is
Affirmed.