Council Bluffs Savings Bank v. Griswold

70 N.W. 376, 50 Neb. 753, 1897 Neb. LEXIS 526
CourtNebraska Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 3, 1897
DocketNo. 7021
StatusPublished
Cited by35 cases

This text of 70 N.W. 376 (Council Bluffs Savings Bank v. Griswold) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nebraska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Council Bluffs Savings Bank v. Griswold, 70 N.W. 376, 50 Neb. 753, 1897 Neb. LEXIS 526 (Neb. 1897).

Opinion

Post, C. J.

This was an action in the district court for Douglas county upon a decree of the district court within and for Pottawattamie county and state of Iowa, which resulted in a final judgment in favor of the defendants below, and from which the plaintiff prosecutes error to this court.

The action in the Iowa court was by the plaintiff herein against Henry W. Griswold, as trustee and in his own right, also against Julius C. Iler, Glaus J. Schmidt, H. E. Gales, Mary E. Fried, O. P. McKesson, H. P. Stoddart, and M. F. Williams, for the foreclosure of a certain mortgage executed by Griswold as trustee, and resulting in a decree awarding to I. S. Wright, who had intervened therein, a first lien upon the mortgaged property for $2,325, and in favor of the plaintiff a second lien thereon, for a like amount. There was a further finding, to the effect that the several defendants above named were personally liable for the amounts thus adjudged due, accompanied by an order for the sale of the mortgaged premises upon special execution, and for a general exe[755]*755cutí on against said defendants for any balance thereon remaining unsatisfied by the proceeds of such sale. Said property was thereafter sold as provided by the decree, and the proceeds thereof, to-wit, $2,465.64, applied in satisfaction of the first lien and costs, leaving nothing to apply on the plaintiff’s judgment. We shall in our discussion of the questions presented adopt the admirable-arrangement thereof in separate brief of counsel for the; defendant Gates.

It is first argued that there is a defect of parties, since" Henry W. Griswold, against whom, in his own right, judgment was rendered by the Iowa court, was not joined herein as a defendant. It is doubtful, indeed, if that objection is presented by the record, but assuming the omission of the party named to have been properly pleaded, the alleged defect will not avail the defendants in this action, since by statute of Iowa all persons bound by a judgment or decree rendered in that state are both jointly and severally liable thereon. Section 2550, Annotated Code of that state, which was introduced in evidence, reads as follows: “Where two or more persons are bound by contract or by judgment, decree, or statute, whether jointly only or jointly and severally, or severally only, and including the parties to negotiable paper, common orders, and checks, and sureties on the same, or separate instruments, or by any liability growing out of the same, the action thereon may, at the plaintiff’s option, be brought against any or all of them. When any of those so bound are dead, the action may be brought against any or all. of the survivors, with any or all of the representatives of the decedents, or against any or all such representatives. An action or judgment against any one or more of several persons jointly bound shall not be a bar to proceedings against the others.” The evident purpose of the statute above quoted is to abolish the joint liability of persons bound by contract, judgment, or statute, and to authorize the prosecution of actions against any or all of the parties so liable, at the election of the [756]*756plaintiff. (Ryerson v. Hendrie, 22 Ia., 481; Hosmer v. Burke, 26 Ia.; 356; Allen v. Maddox, 40 Ia., 125.) Griswold was accordingly not a necessary party, and the contention of the defendants, so far as it relates to this branch of the case, is without merit.

2. It is alleged in the separate answer of Gates, and perhaps others of the defendants, that there is another suit pending between the parties hereto upon the same cause of action. The foundation for that contention is the fact that the plaintiff herein, in the year 1889, commenced an action in the district court for Douglas county upon the judgment here involved, which was, upon a trial to the court without the assistance of a jury, determined in favor of Mary A. Pried, one of the defendants therein, on the ground that the appearance in her name in the Iowa court was unauthorized, and that the judgment was as to her void for want of jurisdiction. There was also a final order dismissing said cause as to the other defendants, without, prejudice to another action. To the order last mentioned the plaintiff excepted and in due time filed a motion for a new trial, which has, so far as this record discloses, never been submitted to the court for its determination. The motion for a new trial did not of itself operate to suspend the judgment or in any way impair- its force or conclusiveness as a determination of the issues involved. Execution will in such case be awarded upon the demand of the successful party for his costs, and in case of an equitable proceeding an appeal may be prosecuted therefrom to this court. (Parr v. Van Horne, 40 Ill., 122; Church v. Goodin, 22 Kan., 527; People, ex rel., v. Loucks, 28 Cal., 68.) The former action is not, therefore, in a legal sense, now pending, and the objection on that ground may be dismissed without further consideration.

3. It is next contended that the plaintiff’s remedy is by means. of a supplemental proceeding for a deficiency judgment in the Iowa court. This contention is based upon the statutes and recognized practice in the courts [757]*757of this state. The laws of Iowa are, it is argued, the record being silent upon the subject, presumed to be the same as our own; hence, as counsel conclude, the court was without authority in the first instance to enter personal judgment against the defendants. It is undoubtedly true, as a general proposition, that the laws of a sister state will, in the absence of proof, be presumed to be the same as those in force in this state; but to that rule there are recognized exceptions, of which the facts of this case afford an excellent illustration. It will, upon reason and authority, be presumed, in the absence of proof to the contrary, that courts of general jurisdiction of other states possess the authority they assume to exercise, and that the methods of procedure pursued by them, although differing from the established practice in this state, are authorized by the laws of the states in which they act. (Dodge v. Coffin, 15 Kan., 277; Ward v. Baker, 16 Kan., 31; Sanford v. Sanford, 28 Conn., 6; Black, Judgments, sec. 889; Freeman, Judgments [4th ed.], sec. 565.) But it is unnecessary to indulge in presumptions in order to sustain the adjudication of the Iowa court, since it is clear that an action would in this state lie upon the record introduced in evidence as a domestic judgment. (Stover v. Tompkins, 34 Neb., 465; Eldredge v. Aultman, Miller & Co., 35 Neb., 884.)

4. It is claimed that the judgment which is the basis of this action, having been determined in the former suit to be void for want of jurisdiction so far as it concerns Mary A. Fried, one of the defendants named therein, is void as to all of the defendants. That claim rests upon the assumption to which we have already alluded, viz., that the judgment in question is the joint obligation only of the several defendants. But the mortgage debt was, as we have seen, the joint and several obligation of the parties thereto, and that the plaintiff might, at its election, have pursued its remedy by means of personal judgment against any or all of such parties. Had Mrs. Fried not been made a party to the foreclosure proceedings [758]*758and the cause prosecuted to judgment against these defendants, the latter would, in view of the statute quoted, have had no ground of complaint.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
70 N.W. 376, 50 Neb. 753, 1897 Neb. LEXIS 526, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/council-bluffs-savings-bank-v-griswold-neb-1897.