Ames v. Brinsden

25 Kan. 746
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedJanuary 15, 1881
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 25 Kan. 746 (Ames v. Brinsden) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ames v. Brinsden, 25 Kan. 746 (kan 1881).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Valentine, J.:

This was an action for a breach of promise of marriage. The defendant made default. On October 28, 1879, and at the October term of the district court of Elk county, judgment was rendered in favor of the plaintiff and against the defendant for the sum of $2,000, the amount claimed in the petition. The judgment as then rendered, and all the proceedings in the case, appear to be regular and valid. Afterward, and on April 9,1880, and at the April term of said court, the defendant filed two motions, one to correct the record of the judgment, and the other to set aside and [747]*747vacate the judgment. The two motions were heard at the same time, and both were granted. The record of the judgment was so amended and modified as to make it show that the judgment was rendered without any evidence having first been introduced; and then the judgment was set aside and vacated, because of the fact that no evidence was introduced to sustain it. The first motion was heard upon evidence, but the second motion was granted solely upon the evidence presented by the record itself, as thus amended. The plaintiff now, as plaintiff in error, brings the case to this court and asks that the order of the court below setting aside and vacating her judgment shall be reversed.

Did the court below err in setting aside and vacating said judgment? That a court may at any time, on motion of either party, or on its own motion, under the statute, (Civil Code, § 575,) or independent of the statute, set aside or vacate any void judgment rendered in its own court, we suppose will be conceded. Also, that a court for good reasons may set aside or vacate or modify any interlocutory judgment or order previously made or rendered by it, up to the adjournment of the term of thecourt at which the final judgment is rendered, wesuppose will also be conceded. Also, that a court for good reasons may set aside or vacate or modify any final judgment rendered by it, at any time during the term at which such final judgment is rendered, we suppose will also be conceded. Also, that a court for good reasons and under the provisions of the civil code, §§568 to 576, may reverse, vacate or modify any judgment or order rendered or made in its own court, we suppose will also be conceded; and that reviewing courts and courts of equity may often reverse, vacate or modify judgments or orders made in their own courts, or in other courts, we suppose will also be conceded. But does the order of the court below come within any of these conceded powers?

I. The defendant claims that the judgment of the court below as originally rendered was void; but in this we think he is in error. The court below had jurisdiction over the subject-matter of the action, and over the parties; and that [748]*748was sufficient to render its decision valid, however irregular or erroneous or voidable it might be. (Burke v. Wheat, 22 Kas. 722.) The plaintiff had set forth a cause of action in her petition, and claimed $2,000 damages. The defendant made default, and by this default admitted that everything stated in the petition was true, except the amount of damages. He admitted that she had a cause of action against him for some amount, ranging from a nominal sum up to $2,000. He admitted that she ought to recover some amount from him, but the exact amount he did not admit. That was a thing necessary for her to prove. At the time the judgment was rendered, she did not introduce any evidence, and the judgment, under such circumstances, should have been in her favor merely for nominal damages. If she had introduced evidence, she could have taken judgment for whatever damages she proved, up to the amount of $2,000. The defendant by his default admitted that she was entitled to a judgment for $2,000, provided she could prove that she had sustained that amount of damages. The court, however, inadvertently rendered judgment in her favor and against the defendant for $2,000, without any evidence being introduced to show the amount of damages which she had sustained. This judgment we think was irregular and voidable. The court might at any time during the term at which it was rendered have set it aside on motion of either party, Or on its own motion. 'But- the judgment was not set aside at any time during the term at which it was rendered; and, not being a void judgment, but only a voidable judgment, it could not be set aside absolutely at any time, and at any term afterward, as a void judgment may. It could then be set aside only under some rule for setting aside merely irregular and voidable judgments.

II. The defendant admits that this is not an interlocutory judgment or order, but that it is a final judgment.

III. The defendant also admits that the judgment was not set aside at the same term at which it was rendered, but at a subsequent term.

[749]*749IV. We think the defendant will also admit that if this judgment is not a void judgment, then (it being a final judgment and rendered at a term of the court previous to the term at which the motion is made to set it aside) that it can be set aside or vacated only under the provisions of §§568 to 576 of the civil code. (Comp. Laws of 1879, pp. 679, 680.) That the judgment could have been set aside and vacated under and in accordance with said provisions, we think the plaintiff herself admits; but she claims that the judgment was not set aside or vacated in accordance with said provisions; and whether it was or not, we think is the only question now remaining for our consideration. We think that said provisions were not strictly complied with in all particulars. They contemplate that no judgment shall be set aside or vacated until it is shown that the defendant has some defense, or partial defense, to the action. Section 572 provides that “a judgment shall not be vacated on motion or petition until it is adjudged that there is a valid defense to the action on which the judgment is rendered.” And this provision applies to judgments irregularly obtained, as well as to others. (Civil Code, § 568, sub. 3.) In the present case there is no pretense that the defendant has any valid defense, or any partial defense, to the plaintiff’s action. From anything appearing in the case, the plaintiff is entitled to all the damages for which the judgment was rendered. From anything appearing in the case, she might, immediately after her judgment was set aside, have introduced evidence and obtained another judgment for the full amount for which her original judgment was rendered, There is no showing or pretense that the amount of the judgment was too great. The only ground for the motion to set aside and vacate the judgment was the technical ground that the judgment was irregularly obtained. Now the statute does not contemplate that judgments shall be set aside for mere irregularities, where the judgments are substantially right, and where the same judgment must again be rendered, if the case be heard upon its merits. The practice in such cases has already been considered to some extent by this court [750]*750in the case of Meixell v. Kirkpatrick, ante, p. 13. The proper course in the present case for the defendant to have pursued was to have filed an affidavit with his motion, stating and showing in his affidavit that the plaintiff was not damaged' to the amount of $2,000, and asking that the case be set down for a hearing upon the evidence, so that it might be shown that she was not damaged to that amount.

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Bluebook (online)
25 Kan. 746, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ames-v-brinsden-kan-1881.