Federal Civil Procedure · Deep Dive

When a Court Judgment Has No Legal Effect

A judgment was entered against you for a lawsuit you never knew about. That judgment may be void. Here is what that means, when it applies, and what the courts have actually said about it — in plain language.

What we cover on this page
I The moment that brings people here
II What “void” actually means
III The three grounds that make a judgment void
IV Void vs. merely wrong — a critical distinction
V When courts threw out the judgment — real cases
VI When courts refused — what does not work
VII The no-time-limit rule — and its limits
VIII What to do if this happened to you
Part I

The Moment That Brings Most People Here

A common scenario
You get a letter — or your bank calls — saying money has been taken from your account. Or a lien has appeared on your house. Or your wages are being garnished. You look into it and discover a court entered a judgment against you in a lawsuit you had never heard of. You were never served. You never got the chance to respond. The court decided the case without you — and now it is trying to collect.

This is called a default judgment. It happens when a defendant does not respond to a lawsuit, and the court enters a judgment automatically in the plaintiff’s favor. Default judgments are a normal and legitimate part of the legal system when the defendant truly had notice and chose not to respond.

But sometimes — more often than people realize — the defendant genuinely never received proper notice. The papers were served at the wrong address. The process server served the wrong person. The court never had authority over the defendant in the first place. In those situations, the judgment that was entered may not be a valid judgment at all. It may be legally void — meaning it has no more legal force than if it had never been entered.

Part II

What “Void” Actually Means

In law, there is a difference between a judgment that is wrong and a judgment that is void. This distinction matters enormously — especially when it comes to time limits.

Type of judgment What it means How to challenge it Time limit
Wrong or unfair The court had authority, but made a mistake or reached the wrong result Appeal, or Rule 60(b)(1) motion within one year Strict — usually one year
Void The court never had the legal authority to enter the judgment in the first place Rule 60(b)(4) motion — in federal court No time limit
Plain English
Think of it this way. If a judge makes the wrong call on the evidence, the judgment is wrong — but it still counts unless you appeal in time. But if that same judge had no authority over your case to begin with — because you were never properly brought before the court — then nothing they decided has any legal force. The judgment is void from the start, like a contract signed under duress: it looks real but it legally never existed.
The Rule — FRCP 60(b)(4)
"On motion and just terms, the court may relieve a party or its legal representative from a final judgment, order, or proceeding for the following reasons: ... (4) the judgment is void."
Fed. R. Civ. P. 60(b)(4)
The most important thing to know
When a judgment is truly void, the court has no discretion. It does not weigh the equities. It does not ask whether the other side will be prejudiced. It does not ask whether you had a good excuse for not responding. A void judgment must be set aside — period. This is different from every other type of motion to vacate a judgment, all of which involve the court balancing factors and exercising judgment.
Part III

The Three Grounds That Make a Judgment Void

Federal courts recognize three categories of defect that make a judgment truly void. These are not opinions — they are constitutional and jurisdictional requirements that every court must satisfy before it has the authority to decide a case.

1
The court never had authority over you personally
Courts cannot just reach out and grab anyone in the world. They need a legal basis to have power over a specific person or company. This is called personal jurisdiction. The most common way a court gets it is through proper service of process — formally delivering the lawsuit papers to you in the way the law requires. If you were never properly served, the court never legally had you before it.
Real example: A Greek basketball team was sued in Texas. They had no offices, no bank accounts, no property in Texas. The breach of contract happened entirely in Greece. The Texas federal court never had personal jurisdiction. The judgment was void.
2
The court had no authority over the type of case
Federal courts can only hear certain types of cases — federal law claims, disputes between citizens of different states over large amounts, and a few others. This is called subject matter jurisdiction. If a federal court hears a case it was never authorized to hear, any judgment it enters is void — even if the case was otherwise decided correctly.
Real example: A state law contract dispute between two citizens of the same state cannot be in federal court. If a federal court enters a default judgment in that case, the judgment is void for lack of subject matter jurisdiction.
3
You were denied basic constitutional notice
The Constitution requires that before the government takes something from you — money, property, rights — you must be given notice and a real opportunity to be heard. This is called due process. A judgment entered without giving you constitutionally adequate notice violates due process and is void.
The Supreme Court said it directly: a defendant who receives no notice of a lawsuit does not need to show they had a winning defense to get the judgment thrown out. The right to be heard is the point — not whether you would have won.
"A judgment entered without notice or service violates due process. A defendant deprived of notice need not show a meritorious defense to obtain relief from such a judgment."
Peralta v. Heights Medical Center, Inc., 485 U.S. 80 (1988) — U.S. Supreme Court
Part IV

Void vs. Merely Wrong — Why This Distinction Matters

The void judgment doctrine is powerful, but it is also narrow. Courts take it seriously precisely because they apply it carefully. Understanding what does not make a judgment void is as important as understanding what does.

The core principle
Legal errors — even obvious legal errors — do not make a judgment void. A judgment is void only when the court lacked the most basic authority to act: jurisdiction over the person, jurisdiction over the subject matter, or compliance with constitutional due process. Everything else is an error that had to be appealed in time. The Supreme Court has said this directly, and the Fifth Circuit follows it consistently.
Here are examples that look like voidness grounds but are not:
What the defendant argued Why it was not void Result
The federal law in the complaint does not apply to us Whether a law applies is a merits question, not a jurisdictional one. The court still had authority to decide it — even if it decided wrong. Not void
The plaintiff lacked standing to sue Most standing arguments are merits-based, not Article III constitutional standing. Real-party-in-interest defects especially are not jurisdictional. Not void
The case was filed in the wrong venue Venue is a procedural rule, not a jurisdictional requirement. A court in the wrong venue still has the authority to hear the case. Venue defects must be raised early or they are waived. Not void
The complaint failed to state a valid legal claim This is a deficiency in the plaintiff’s pleading, not a defect in the court’s authority. Courts can enter judgments on deficient complaints — the judgment is wrong, not void. Not void
We were not properly served — and we have no connections to this state This IS a voidness ground. Lack of proper service plus lack of any basis for personal jurisdiction means the court never had authority over the defendant. Void
The critical trap
Many people who discover a default judgment try to argue that the underlying case was wrong on the merits — that they did not actually owe the money, or that the contract was invalid. Those arguments do not make the judgment void. If the court had jurisdiction and you were properly served, the time to make those arguments was in the lawsuit. The void judgment doctrine is about the court’s authority, not about who was right and who was wrong.
Part V — Real Cases

When Courts Threw Out the Judgment

These are real Fifth Circuit and Southern District of Texas cases where a default judgment was vacated as void. Each one had a human story behind it. Click any case to read what happened.

Part VI — Real Cases

When Courts Refused to Vacate

These cases show where the line is drawn. In each one, the defendant argued the judgment was void — but the court disagreed. Understanding why these failed helps you evaluate whether your own situation is different.

Confusion, lost papers, and “I did not see the summons”
A defendant argued she was not properly served because her attorney did not see a summons in the papers when reviewing them. The court found that the process server’s affidavit showed valid personal service. The attorney not noticing the summons twelve days later did not undo the service that already happened.
Jenkens & Gilchrist v. Groia & Co., 542 F.3d 114 (5th Cir. 2008)
Arguing the plaintiff had no right to sue
Defendants argued the judgment was void because the plaintiff was not the real party in interest — the claims belonged to a bankruptcy estate, not the individual plaintiffs. The Fifth Circuit held this is a merits-based procedural objection. It is not a jurisdictional defect and does not create voidness.
Norris v. Causey, 869 F.3d 360 (5th Cir. 2017)
The federal law did not apply to us extraterritorially
Chinese defendants argued that a $100 million judgment was void because U.S. copyright and satellite piracy statutes did not apply to their foreign conduct. The Fifth Circuit held that whether a statute applies is a merits question — the court had federal question jurisdiction regardless, and the judgment stood.
Nagravision SA v. Gotech International Technology, 882 F.3d 494 (5th Cir. 2018)
The case was filed in the wrong venue
Defendants argued the judgment was void because there was a forum-selection clause requiring disputes to be heard elsewhere. The court held that venue defects and forum-selection arguments do not deprive a court of jurisdiction. They are waivable procedural rules — not void-creating defects.
Osprey Funding, LLC v. J3S Enterprises, LLC, S.D. Tex. 2015
Defendants participated in litigation first, then raised jurisdiction
Defendants had counsel who engaged with the merits of the case before default was entered. They later argued the judgment was void for lack of personal jurisdiction. The Fifth Circuit held they had waived the objection by participating in the litigation through counsel. You cannot participate, lose, and then claim the court had no authority.
Broadcast Music, Inc. v. M.T.S. Enterprises, 811 F.2d 278 (5th Cir. 1987)
Service at last known address with actual notice of the suit
A defendant who had fled argued the $1.4 billion judgment against him was void because service at his last known New York residence was improper. The court held that the plaintiff had made good-faith efforts to locate him and he had actual notice of the suit. The judgment was not void — though the court still vacated it on other equitable grounds.
Harvest Natural Resources v. Ramirez Carreno, S.D. Tex. 2020
Part VII

The No-Time-Limit Rule — And Its Limits

This is the feature of the void judgment doctrine that surprises people most. There is no deadline for filing a Rule 60(b)(4) motion to vacate a void judgment. A judgment that is void today was void the day it was entered — and a motion to vacate it can be filed years or even decades later.

Why there is no time limit
The logic is simple: if a court never had authority to enter a judgment, then the passage of time cannot create that authority. Time does not heal a void judgment. The First Circuit once described it this way — a void judgment is “a legal nullity.” You cannot put a deadline on challenging something that has no legal force. This is why people who discover a judgment years after the fact — when collection begins — can still challenge it.
The critical limit — it must actually be void
The no-time-limit rule applies only to truly void judgments. If the judgment is merely wrong — a legal error, a bad damages calculation, an unfair outcome — the normal deadlines apply and cannot be extended. The no-time-limit rule is not a back door for people who missed their appeal deadline. Courts watch carefully for attempts to use Rule 60(b)(4) to relitigate decisions that should have been appealed years ago.
The practical importance
The most common situation where this matters: a creditor begins collection on a years-old default judgment — garnishing wages, levying bank accounts, placing liens on property. The debtor investigates and discovers the original service was defective, or the original court had no personal jurisdiction. Because there is no time limit, the debtor can still file a Rule 60(b)(4) motion. If the judgment is void, it must be vacated — and the collection stops.
Part VIII

What to Do If This Happened to You

If you have discovered a default judgment against you that you did not know about, work through these steps. The order matters — some issues are time-sensitive even if the underlying void judgment challenge is not.

  • 1 Get the case number and pull the docket immediately. You need to know exactly what was filed, when default was entered, and when judgment was entered. These are two separate events with different consequences. The docket is available through PACER for federal cases.
  • 2 Find the proof of service on file. Look at how the complaint was served on you. Who was served? Where? By what method? Compare it against the requirements of Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 4. This is the most important document in your case.
  • 3 Ask: did the court have personal jurisdiction? Were you a resident of the state where the lawsuit was filed? Did the events in the lawsuit have anything to do with that state? Did you have any business, property, or regular activity there? If the answer to all of these is no, there may be a personal jurisdiction defect.
  • 4 Ask: did the court have subject matter jurisdiction? Was this a federal court? Did the case involve a federal law or a dispute between citizens of different states for more than $75,000? If neither basis for federal jurisdiction applied, subject matter jurisdiction may be absent.
  • 5 Do not ignore the collection proceedings. Even if the underlying judgment is void, collection can cause immediate damage — frozen accounts, liens on property, garnished wages. You may need to file an emergency motion to stay collection while the voidness motion is being resolved.
  • 6 Calculate the one-year deadline anyway. Even if you believe the judgment is void (no time limit), you should evaluate whether Rule 60(b)(1) — excusable neglect, one-year deadline — is also available. Sometimes there are multiple grounds for relief, and having a backup argument is always better.
  • 7 Contact an attorney before filing anything. A Rule 60(b)(4) motion in federal court is a sophisticated filing. The factual record you build in that motion — affidavits, records, jurisdictional evidence — will determine the outcome. Getting it right the first time matters.
Do not try to simply “ignore” a judgment you believe is void
Even if a judgment is void, it will continue to be enforced until a court formally vacates it. Creditors will continue to garnish wages and levy accounts. The judgment will appear on credit reports. Property liens will remain. A void judgment does not become inactive on its own. You have to go to court and have it declared void.
Act Immediately

Found a judgment you knew nothing about?

Collection on a void judgment can cause immediate, serious harm. The sooner you engage counsel, the more options remain available.

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The information on this page is for general educational purposes only. Nothing here constitutes legal advice for any individual case or situation. Receipt or viewing does not create an attorney–client relationship. Schedule a consultation for advice specific to your situation.