Coney Island Auto Parts v. Burton
Case Overview
A Tennessee company sued a Brooklyn auto shop for $47,000, the Brooklyn shop ignored it on the theory that Tennessee had no personal jurisdiction over them, a default judgment was entered anyway, and then years later someone froze their bank accounts to collect on it. The question the Supreme Court took up is whether a court judgment that was void from the beginning because it was entered without proper jurisdiction ever becomes too late to challenge. The answer matters for anyone who has ever declined to respond to a lawsuit from a court that had no business reaching them in the first place.
Decision
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Opinion of the Court
The Application
The Brooklyn auto shop did not respond to the Tennessee lawsuit and a default judgment was entered against it. Years later, when the plaintiff sought to enforce the judgment through garnishment, the shop challenged the underlying judgment's validity on the ground that Tennessee lacked personal jurisdiction over it. The shop's initial failure to respond does not forfeit its ability to later attack a judgment that was void from its inception due to lack of jurisdiction.
The Conclusion
The Supreme Court held that a judgment void for lack of personal jurisdiction remains vulnerable to collateral attack despite the passage of time and enforcement efforts, preserving a defendant's right to challenge a fundamentally defective judgment even years after entry.
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