1. A sentence of a court, pronounced against a party without
hearing him or giving him an opportunity to be heard, is not a
judicial determination of his rights and is not entitled to respect
in any other tribunal.
2. The jurisdiction acquired by the seizure of property in a
proceeding
in rem for its condemnation for alleged
forfeiture is not to pass upon the question of forfeiture
absolutely, but to pass upon that question after opportunity has
been afforded to its owner and parties interested to appear and be
heard upon the charges for which the forfeiture is claimed. To that
end, some notification of the proceedings, beyond that arising from
the seizure, prescribing the time within which the appearance must
be made is essential.
3. In proceedings before the district court in a confiscation
case, monition and notice were issued and published, but the
appearance of the owner, for which they called, when made, was
stricken out, his right to appear being denied by the court.
Held that the subsequent sentence of confiscation of his
property was as inoperative upon his rights as though no monition
or notice had ever been issued. The legal effect of striking out
his appearance was to recall the monition and notice as to him.
4. The doctrine that where a court has once acquired
jurisdiction it has a right to decide every question which arises
in the cause, and its judgment, however erroneous, cannot be
collaterally assailed, is only correct when the court proceeds,
after acquiring jurisdiction of the cause, according to the
established modes governing the class to which the case belongs,
and does not transcend, in the extent or character of its judgment,
the law which is applicable to it.
Ejectment for a tract of land situate in the City of Alexandria,
Va. Finding and judgment for the plaintiff. The defendant sued out
this writ of error. The facts are stated in the opinion of the
Court.
MR. JUSTICE FIELD delivered the opinion of the Court.
This was an action of ejectment to recover certain real
Page 93 U. S. 275
property in the City of Alexandria in the State of Virginia. It
was brought in the corporation court of that city, and a writ of
error from the court of appeals of the state to review the judgment
obtained having been refused, the case was brought here directly by
a writ of error from this Court. Authority for this mode of
procedure will be found stated in the case of
Gregory v.
McVeigh, reported in the 23d of Wallace.
The plaintiff in the corporation court proved title in himself
to the premises in controversy and consequent right to their
immediate possession unless his life estate in them had been
divested by a sale under a decree of condemnation rendered in
March, 1864, by the District Court of the United states for the
Eastern District of Virginia upon proceedings for their
confiscation. The defendant relied upon the deed to his grantor
executed by the marshal of the district upon such sale.
The proceedings mentioned were instituted under the Act of
Congress of July 17, 1862, "to suppress insurrection, to punish
treason and rebellion, to seize and confiscate the property of
rebels, and for other purposes."
In July, 1863, the premises in controversy were seized by the
marshal of the district by order of the district attorney, acting
under instructions from the Attorney General. In August following,
a libel of information against the property was filed in the name
of the United states setting forth that the plaintiff in this case
was the owner of the property in question; that he had, since the
passage of the above act, held an office of honor and trust under
the government of the so-called Confederate States and in various
ways had given aid and comfort to the rebellion; that the property
had been seized in pursuance of the act in compliance with
instructions from the Attorney General, and, by reason of the
premises, was forfeited to the United states, and should be
condemned. It closed with a prayer that process of monition might
issue against the owner or owners of the property and all persons
interested or claiming an interest therein, warning them at some
early day "to appear and answer" the libel, and, as the owner of
the property was a nonresident and absent, that an order of
publication in the usual form be also made. Upon this libel the
district judge ordered process of monition to issue as prayed, and
designated
Page 93 U. S. 276
a day and place for the trial of the cause and that notice of
the same, with the substance of the libel, should be given by
publication in a newspaper of the city and by posting at the door
of the courthouse. The process of monition and notice were
accordingly issued and published. Both described the land and
mentioned its seizure, and named the day and place fixed for the
trial. The monition stated that at the trial all persons interested
in the land or claiming an interest might "appear and make their
allegations in that behalf." The notice warned all persons to
appear at the trial "to show cause why condemnation should not be
decreed, and to intervene for their interest."
The owner of the property, in response to the monition and
notice, appeared by counsel and filed a claim to the property and
an answer to the libel. Subsequently, on the 10th of March, 1864,
the district attorney moved that the claim and answer and the
appearance of the respondent by counsel be stricken from the files
on the ground that it appeared from his answer that he was at the
time of filing the same "a resident within the City of Richmond,
within the Confederate lines, and a rebel." On the same day the
motion was granted and the claim and answer ordered to be stricken
from the files. The appearance of the respondent was by his answer.
The court immediately entered its sentence and decree condemning
the property as forfeited to the United states, reciting that the
usual proclamation having been made, the default of all persons had
been duly entered. The decree ordered the issue of a
venditioni
exponas for the sale of the property, returnable on the
sixteenth day of the following April. At the sale under this writ,
the grantor of the defendant became the purchaser.
The question for determination is whether the decree of
condemnation thus rendered, without allowing the owner of the
property to appear in response to the monition, interpose his claim
for the property, and answer the libel was of any validity. In
other words, the question is whether the property of the plaintiff
could be forfeited by the sentence of the court in a judicial
proceeding to which he was not allowed to appear and make answer to
the charges against him upon the allegation of which the forfeiture
was demanded.
Page 93 U. S. 277
There were several libels of information filed against the
property of the plaintiff at the same time with the one here
mentioned. They were identical in their allegations except as to
the property seized, and the same motion to strike from the files
the appearance, claim, and answer of the respondent was made in
each case, and on the same day, and similar orders were entered and
like decrees of condemnation. One of these was brought here, and is
reported in the 11th of Wallace. In delivering the unanimous
opinion of this Court upon reversing the decree in the case and
referring to the order striking out the claim and answer, MR.
JUSTICE SWAYNE said:
"The order in effect denied the respondent a hearing. It is
alleged he was in the position of an alien enemy, and could have no
locus standi in that forum. If assailed there, he could
defend there. The liability and right are inseparable. A different
result would be a blot upon our jurisprudence and civilization. We
cannot hesitate or doubt on the subject. It would be contrary to
the first principles of the social compact and of the right
administration of justice."
11 Wall.
78 U. S.
267.
The principle stated in this terse language lies at the
foundation of all well ordered systems of jurisprudence. Wherever
one is assailed in his person or his property, there he may defend,
for the liability and the right are inseparable. This is a
principle of natural justice, recognized as such by the common
intelligence and conscience of all nations. A sentence of a court
pronounced against a party without hearing him or giving him an
opportunity to be heard is not a judicial determination of his
rights, and is not entitled to respect in any other tribunal.
That there must be notice to a party of some kind, actual or
constructive, to a valid judgment affecting his rights is admitted.
Until notice is given, the court has no jurisdiction in any case to
proceed to judgment, whatever its authority may be, by the law of
its organization, over the subject matter. But notice is only for
the purpose of affording the party an opportunity of being heard
upon the claim or the charges made; it is a summons to him to
appear and speak, if he has any thing to say, why the judgment
sought should not be rendered. A denial to a party of the benefit
of a notice would be in effect to
Page 93 U. S. 278
deny that he is entitled to notice at all, and the sham and
deceptive proceeding had better be omitted altogether. It would be
like saying to a party appear and you shall be heard, and, when he
has appeared, saying your appearance shall not be recognized and
you shall not be heard. In the present case, the district court not
only in effect said this, but immediately added a decree of
condemnation, reciting that the default of all persons had been
duly entered. It is difficult to speak of a decree thus rendered
with moderation; it was in fact a mere arbitrary edict, clothed in
the form of a judicial sentence.
The law is and always has been that whenever notice or citation
is required, the party cited has the right to appear and be heard,
and when the latter is denied, the former is ineffectual for any
purpose. The denial to a party in such a case of the right to
appear is in legal effect the recall of the citation to him. The
period within which the appearance must be made and the right to be
heard exercised is, of course, a matter of regulation, depending
either upon positive law or the rules or orders of the court or the
established practice in such cases. And if the appearance be not
made and the right to be heard be not exercised within the period
thus prescribed, the default of the party prosecuted, or possible
claimants of the property, may, of course, be entered, and the
allegations of the libel be taken as true for the purpose of the
proceeding. But the denial of the right to appear and be heard at
all is a different matter altogether.
The position of the defendant's counsel is that, as the
proceeding for the confiscation of the property was one
in
rem, the court, by seizure of the property, acquired
jurisdiction to determine its liability to forfeiture, and
consequently had a right to decide all questions subsequently
arising in the progress of the cause, and its decree, however
erroneous, cannot, therefore, be collaterally assailed. In supposed
support of this position, opinions of this Court in several cases
are cited where similar language is used respecting the power of a
court to pass upon questions arising after jurisdiction has
attached. But the preliminary proposition of the counsel is not
correct. The jurisdiction acquired by the court by seizure of the
res was not to condemn the property without further
proceedings. The physical
Page 93 U. S. 279
seizure did not of itself establish the allegations of the
libel, and could not therefore authorize the immediate forfeiture
of the property seized. A sentence rendered simply from the fact of
seizure would not be a judicial determination of the question of
forfeiture, but a mere arbitrary edict of the judicial officer. The
seizure in a suit
in rem only brings the property seized
within the custody of the court, and informs the owner of that
fact. The theory of the law is that all property is in the
possession of its owner, in person or by agent, and that its
seizure will therefore operate to impart notice to him. Where
notice is thus given, the owner has the right to appear and be
heard respecting the charges for which the forfeiture is claimed.
That right must be recognized and its exercise allowed before the
court can proceed beyond the seizure to judgment. The jurisdiction
acquired by the seizure is not to pass upon the question of
forfeiture absolutely, but to pass upon that question after
opportunity has been afforded to its owner and parties interested
to appear and be heard upon the charges. To this end, some
notification of the proceedings, beyond that arising from the
seizure, prescribing the time within which the appearance must be
made, is essential. Such notification is usually given by monition,
public proclamation, or publication in some other form. The manner
of the notification is immaterial, but the notification itself is
indispensable.
These views find corroboration in the opinion of Mr. Justice
Story in the case of
Bradstreet v. Neptune Insurance Co.,
3 Sumn. 601. In that case, the action was upon a policy of
insurance upon a vessel, the declaration alleging its loss by
seizure of the Mexican government. The defendants admitted the
seizure, but averred that it was made and that the vessel was
condemned for violation of the revenue laws of Mexico, and to prove
the averment produced a transcript of the record of the proceedings
of the Mexican court against the vessel, and of the decree of
condemnation. Among the questions considered by the court was the
effect of that record as proof of the laws of Mexico, and of the
jurisdiction of the court and the cause of seizure and
condemnation. After stating that the sentence of a foreign court of
admiralty and prize
in rem was in general conclusive, not
only in respect to the parties in interest, but
Page 93 U. S. 280
also for collateral purposes and in collateral suits, as to the
direct matter of title and property in judgment and as to the facts
on which the tribunal professed to proceed, Mr. Justice Story said
that it did not strike him that any sound distinction could be made
between a sentence pronounced
in rem by a court of
admiralty and prize, and a like sentence pronounced by a municipal
court upon a seizure or other proceeding
in rem; that in
each, the sentence was conclusive as to the title and property,
and, it seemed to him, was equally conclusive as to the facts on
which the sentence professed to be founded. But the learned judge
added that it was an essential ingredient in every case, when such
effect was sought to be given to the sentence, that there should
have been proper judicial proceedings upon which to found the
decree -- that is, that there should have been some certain written
allegations of the offense, or statement of the charge for which
the seizure was made and upon which the forfeiture was sought to be
enforced, and that there should be some personal or public notice
of the proceedings so that the parties in interest or their
representatives or agents might know what the offense was with
which they were charged and might have an opportunity to defend
themselves, and to disprove the same. "It is a rule," said the
learned judge,
"founded in the first principles of natural justice that a party
shall have an opportunity to be heard in his defense before his
property is condemned and that charges on which the condemnation is
sought shall be specific, determinate, and clear. If a seizure is
made and condemnation is passed without the allegation of any
specific cause of forfeiture or offense and without any public
notice of the proceedings, so that the parties in interest have no
opportunity of appearing and making a defense, the sentence is not
so much a judicial sentence as an arbitrary sovereign edict. It has
none of the elements of a judicial proceeding, and deserves not the
respect of any foreign nation. It ought to have no intrinsic credit
given to it, either for its justice or for its truth, by any
foreign tribunal. It amounts to little more, in common sense and
common honesty, than the sentence of the tribunal which first
punishes and then hears the party --
castigatque auditque.
It may be binding upon the subjects of that particular nation. But,
upon the
Page 93 U. S. 281
eternal principles of justice, it ought to have no binding
obligation upon the rights or property of the subjects of other
nations, for it tramples under foot all the doctrines of
international law and is but a solemn fraud if it is clothed with
all the forms of a judicial proceeding."
In another part of the same opinion, the judge characterized
such sentences "as mere mockeries, and as in no just sense judicial
proceedings," and declared that they "ought to be deemed, both
ex directo in rem and collaterally, to be mere arbitrary
edicts or substantial frauds."
This language, it is true, is used with respect to proceedings
in rem of a foreign court, but it is equally applicable
and pertinent to proceedings
in rem of a domestic court,
when they are taken without any monition or public notice to the
parties. In
Woodruff v. Taylor, 20 Vt. 65, the subject of
proceedings
in rem in our courts is elaborately considered
by the Supreme Court of Vermont. After stating that in such cases
notice is given to the whole world, but that from its nature it is
to the greater part of the world constructive only, and mentioning
the manner in which such notice is given in cases of seizure for
violation of the revenue laws by publication of the substance of
the libel with the order of the court thereon specifying the time
and place of trial and by proclamation for all persons interested
to appear and contest the forfeiture claimed, the court observed
that in every court and in all countries where judgments were
respected, notice of some kind was given, and that it was just as
material to the validity of a judgment
in rem that
constructive notice at least should appear to have been given as
that actual notice should appear upon the record of a judgment in
personam. "A proceeding," continued the court,
"professing to determine the right of property, where no notice,
written or constructive, is given, whatever else it might be
called, would not be entitled to be dignified with the name of a
judicial proceeding. It would be a mere arbitrary edict, not to be
regarded anywhere as the judgment of a court."
In the proceedings before the district court in the confiscation
case, monition and notice, as already stated, were issued and
published, but the appearance of the owner for which they called,
having been refused, the subsequent sentence of
Page 93 U. S. 282
confiscation of his property was as inoperative upon his rights
as though no monition or notice had ever been issued. The legal
effect of striking out his appearance was to recall the monition
and notice as to him. His position with reference to subsequent
proceedings was then not unlike that of a party in a personal
action, after the service made upon him has been set aside. A
service set aside is never service by which a judgment in the
action can be upheld.
The doctrine invoked by counsel that where a court has once
acquired jurisdiction, it has a right to decide every question
which arises in the cause, and its judgment, however erroneous,
cannot be collaterally assailed is undoubtedly correct as a general
proposition, but, like all general propositions, is subject to many
qualifications in its application. All courts, even the highest,
are more or less limited in their jurisdiction; they are limited to
particular classes of actions, such as civil or criminal, or to
particular modes of administering relief, such as legal or
equitable, or to transactions of a special character, such as arise
on navigable waters, or relate to the testamentary disposition of
estates, or to the use of particular process in the enforcement of
their judgments.
Norton v. Meador, Circuit Court for
California. Though the court may possess jurisdiction of a cause,
of the subject matter, and of the parties, it is still limited in
its modes of procedure, and in the extent and character of its
judgments. It must act judicially in all things, and cannot then
transcend the power conferred by the law. If, for instance, the
action be upon a money demand, the court, notwithstanding its
complete jurisdiction over the subject and parties, has no power to
pass judgment of imprisonment in the penitentiary upon the
defendant. If the action be for a libel or personal tort, the court
cannot order in the case a specific performance of a contract. If
the action be for the possession of real property, the court is
powerless to admit in the case the probate of a will. Instances of
this kind show that the general doctrine stated by counsel is
subject to many qualifications. The judgments mentioned, given in
the cases supposed, would not be merely erroneous; they would be
absolutely void, because the court in rendering them would
transcend the limits of its authority in those cases.
See
the language of MR. JUSTICE
Page 93 U. S. 283
MILLER to the same purport in the case of
Ex Parte
Lange, 18 Wall. 163. So it was held by this Court
in
Bigelow v.
Forrest, 9 Wall. 339, that a judgment in a
confiscation case condemning the fee of the property was void for
the remainder after the termination of the life estate of the
owner. To the objection that the decree was conclusive that the
entire fee was confiscated, MR. JUSTICE STRONG, speaking the
unanimous opinion of the Court, replied:
"Doubtless a decree of a court having jurisdiction to make the
decree cannot be impeached collaterally, but under the act of
Congress, the district court had no power to order a sale which
should confer upon the purchaser rights outlasting the life of
French Forrest [the owner]. Had it done so, it would have
transcended its jurisdiction."
Id., 76 U. S.
350.
So a departure from established modes of procedure will often
render the judgment void; thus, the sentence of a person charged
with felony, upon conviction by the court without the intervention
of a jury, would be invalid for any purpose. The decree of a court
of equity upon oral allegations, without written pleadings, would
be an idle act, of no force beyond that of an advisory proceeding
of the chancellor. And the reason is that the courts are not
authorized to exert their power in that way.
The doctrine stated by counsel is only correct when the court
proceeds, after acquiring jurisdiction of the cause, according to
the established modes governing the class to which the case
belongs, and does not transcend, in the extent or character of its
judgment, the law which is applicable to it. The statement of the
doctrine by MR. JUSTICE SWAYNE in the case of
Cornell v.
Williams, reported in the 20th of Wallace, is more accurate.
"The jurisdiction," says the justice,
"having attached in the case, everything done within the power
of that jurisdiction, when collaterally questioned, is held
conclusive of the rights of the parties unless impeached for
fraud."
20 Wall.
87 U. S.
250.
It was not within the power of the jurisdiction of the district
court to proceed with the case so as to affect the rights of the
owner after his appearance had been stricken out, and the benefit
of the citation to him thus denied. For jurisdiction
Page 93 U. S. 284
is the right to hear and determine, not to determine without
hearing. And where, as in that case, no appearance was allowed,
there could be no hearing or opportunity of being heard, and
therefore could be no exercise of jurisdiction. By the act of the
court, the respondent was excluded from its jurisdiction.
Judgment affirmed.
MR. JUSTICE MILLER, MR. JUSTICE BRADLEY, and MR. JUSTICE HUNT
dissented.
NOTE --
Gregory v. McVeigh, also in error to the
Corporation Court of the City of Alexandria, Va., was argued at the
same time and by the same counsel as was the preceding case.
MR. JUSTICE FIELD delivered the opinion of the Court.
This case is similar to that of
Windsor v. McVeigh,
and, upon the authority of the decision in that case, the judgment
below is affirmed.
MR. JUSTICE MILLER, MR. JUSTICE BRADLEY, and MR. JUSTICE HUNT
dissented.