Dufour v. Benson
This text of 117 N.W.2d 2 (Dufour v. Benson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
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Appeal by defendants Lawrence J. Benson and Earl Benson from a default judgment and a prior order in an action commenced in the District Court of Ramsey County by Joseph N. Dufour, d. b. a. Du-four Electric Company, to recover the reasonable value of electrical wiring furnished and installed in a building at 2204 Scudder Avenue, St. Paul.1 The summons and complaint were served on defendant Earl Benson on August 8, 1958, and on Lawrence Benson on September 4, 1958.
In the complaint plaintiff alleges that the labor and materials furnished for the improvement were of the reasonable value of $714.55. A bill of particulars was made a part of the complaint, as was a mechanics lien statement allegedly filed on July 17, 1957. Both showed a total of $714.55 due plaintiff. According to the mechanics lien statement, the first item contributed to the improvement was furnished February 20, 1957, and the last item April 22, 1957.
Minn. St. 514.12, subd. 3, provides that no lien shall be enforced in any case unless the holder thereof shall assert the same either by complaint or answer within one year after the date of the last item of his claim as set forth in the recorded lien statement. Since no lien could be claimed when the action was begun, it is clear that plaintiff had no intention of proceeding with a foreclosure of the lien and in fact brought the suit to recover the reasonable value of the materials and labor.
Since defendants failed to answer plaintiff’s complaint in due time, plaintiff on December 18, 1958, proceeded to enter a default judg[378]*378ment pursuant to Rules of Civil Procedure, Rule 55.01. Rule 55.01 provides in part:
“When a party against whom a judgment for affirmative relief is sought has failed to plead or otherwise defend within the time allowed therefor by these rules or by statute, and that fact is made to appear by affidavit, judgment by default shall be entered against him as follows:
“(1) When the plaintiffs claim against a defendant is upon a contract for the payment of money only, * * * the clerk, upon request of the plaintiff and upon affidavit of the amount due, which may not exceed the amount demanded in the complaint, shall enter judgment for the amount due and costs against the defendant.”
Plaintiff fully complied with this rule.
After entry of judgment plaintiff delivered an execution to the sheriff, who returned it unsatisfied on February 4, 1959. On February 6 defendants secured an order restraining plaintiff from collection of the judgment and requiring him to show cause why it should not be set aside and defendants be permitted to defend. On February 19, 1959, after a hearing, the trial court directed the attorney for the defendants to prepare an order continuing the temporary restraining order and requiring the matter to be set for trial immediately upon the condition that defendants pay forthwith $50 attorney’s fees and furnish a bond of $750. No order was entered, and not until October 21, 1959, were the attorney’s fees paid. The bond was not furnished until still later. In January 1960, plaintiff obtained an order requiring defendants to show cause why the restraining order entered February 6, 1959, should not be set aside and plaintiff be permitted to proceed with the collection of the judgment previously entered.
After a hearing on this order, on January 20, 1960, the trial court ordered that the judgment be vacated; that the $750 deposited in escrow remain pending the trial of the action and be applied toward the judgment, if any, which plaintiff might recover; and that defendants have 11 days from the date of the order to serve and file their answer or other pleadings or in the alternative defendants might permit their proposed answer, already filed, to stand. The court further ordered [379]*379that a note of issue be filed forthwith and the case advanced on the calendar to be heard February 8, 1960, or as soon thereafter as it might be reached, and that plaintiff be allowed additional attorney’s fees of $25 for bringing on the motion resulting in this order.
Defendants did not file an answer within the 11-day period and in fact did not do so until May 25, 1960. They have not paid the additional $25 attorney’s fees and have neglected entirely to proceed to trial. On October 28, 1960, after hearing on a motion by plaintiff, the court ordered that plaintiff be authorized to enter judgment as by default against defendants and that the cash bond furnished by defendants as a basis for the orders of February 6, 1959, and January 20, 1960, might be applied upon such judgment. Pursuant to this order, judgment was entered on November 8, 1960, for $878.10 which included $15.85 costs. Defendants appeal from this judgment and from the order entered October 28, 1960.
No errors have been assigned and it is therefore difficult to understand on what grounds defendants contend there should be a reversal. Clearly their counsel have not followed accepted procedures since Supreme Court Rule VIII(3)(e) (222 Minn, xxxiv) provides:
“Errors assigned shall be separately and concisely stated and numbered, without repetition, and where a finding of fact is attacked as not sustained by the evidence, it shall be particularly specified.”
An affirmance might well be entered herein for want of assignment of errors as required by this rule. Duncan v. Kohler, 37 Minn. 379, 34 N. W. 594.
So far as the judgment appealed from is concerned, it is not for this court to inquire whether the findings of fact are justified by the evidence but only whether they support the conclusions of law and the judgment. Insofar as errors of fact are concerned, no question is presented on this appeal. The court had jurisdiction; the findings of fact stand in effect unchallenged; and the conclusions of law sustain the judgment entered.
This court said in Kuhlmann v. Educational Publishers, Inc. 245 Minn. 171, 175, 71 N. W. (2d) 889, 893:
[380]*380“While ordinarily this court will refuse to consider errors that are not assigned we have considered defendant’s arguments in the instant case to the extent that plaintiff has voluntarily replied to them.”
Plaintiff here in the shortest of briefs states that defendants failed, as the record discloses, to comply with the orders of the court within the time provided to entitle them to relief and failed to pay the last fee of $25 ordered by the court. He argues that defendants may assert that they are entitled to their day in court but if they fail to abide by the orders permitting it they cannot now complain.
In Swanstrom v. Marvin, 38 Minn. 359, 37 N. W. 455, it was held that upon an application to vacate a judgment based upon an affidavit the essential points of which are met and contradicted, it is not an abuse of discretion for the court to refuse the relief asked, and that the second application for such relief founded upon facts which were known, or should have been known, to the party when he made the first application should not be considered by the court.
In Weller v. Hammer, 43 Minn. 195, 45 N. W.
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
117 N.W.2d 2, 263 Minn. 376, 1962 Minn. LEXIS 794, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dufour-v-benson-minn-1962.