Dunton v. McCook

94 N.W. 942, 120 Iowa 444
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedMay 18, 1903
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 94 N.W. 942 (Dunton v. McCook) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dunton v. McCook, 94 N.W. 942, 120 Iowa 444 (iowa 1903).

Opinion

Ladd, J.

The original decree in this case was entered in the district court May 18, 1892. Upon appeal that court lost jurisdiction. As said in Levi v. Karrick, 15 Iowa, a jorisdic-reviva?o?eal: 444: “When appeal is taken, all power of the court below over the parties and subject-matter is lost until the cause, or some part thereof, is remanded back, by order of this court, for its further action.” McGlaughlin v. O’Rourke, 12 Iowa, 459; Stillman v. Rosenberg, 111 Iowa, 322. But pending such appeal the decree continued in full force for all purposes. Watson v. Richardson, 110 Iowa, 698. It was affirmed in this court January 18, 1895, and petition for rehearing denied June 1st of that year. That ended the suit. Thereafter it was pending in neither court. The affirmance was merely a ratification of what had been done in the lower court, and left the parties in precisely the same situation as though no appeal had been taken. U S. v. Jones, 26 Fed. Cas. 638 (No. 15,492); Steinback v. Stewart, 11 Wall. 566 (20 L. Ed. 56); 3 Cyc. 422; Werborn v. Pinney, 76 Ala. 291. Under our practice a new decree is not •entered in the Supreme Court upon affirmance, but that of the court below confirmed, with a judgment for costs •added. As the cause was not remanded for any purpose, the district court did not acquire jurisdiction to retry any of the issues subsequent to appeal. The suit having been terminated, the clerk could not revive or open it again by issuing a procedendo. The only purpose for that process in such a case is to notify the district court that it is at liberty to enforce its decree. In Steel v. Long, (Iowa) 84 N. W. Rep. 677, an order of the district court striking a cross-petition filed subsequent to the affirmance of the original decree was approved, the court saying: “Not a thing remained for the trial court to do, nor was it directed to take further [448]*448action in the matter. The original action was therefore at an end, so far, at least, as the district court was concerned,, and the defendant had no right to then file a cross-petition. If the position contended for by appellants were tenable, there would be no end to a cause of action. If a cross-petition may be filed and new parties brought in one week after final determination by decree it might, under such circumstances, be permitted one, two or three years thereafter.” To the same effect, see McCall v. Webb, 126 N. C. 760 (36 S. E. Rep. 174); Greenwood Township v. Richardson , (Kan.) 62 Pac. Rep. 430; Herstein v. Walker, 90 Ala. 477 (7 South. Rep. 821). So far as the questions-at issue were concerned, the suit, upon affirmanee, became a part of the irrevocable past.

II. But no attempt was made in the subsequent-pleadings to change or modify the decree. The object-sought related solely to the enforcement of that already 2. -enforce-judgment. rendered. True, the pleading filed by plaintiff is designated a “supplemental petition,” and, as contended, was not such as is contemplated by section 3641 of the Code. Leach v. Germania Building Ass'n, 102 Iowa, 125; Foote v. Burlington Gaslight Co., 103 Iowa, 576; Allen v. Davenport, 115 Iowa, 20. But the name by which it was labeled is not material. Though the court had lost jurisdiction of the suit, it had not of the decree. It still retained-the inherent power to enter appropriate orders for its enforcement. In Hartley v. Bartruff, 112 Iowa, 592, in approving an order extending the time fixed in the decree for redemption, we said: “The manner and time of carrying a decision into effect never rests upon evidence, in the sense that evidence controls these questions. These are always to be determined by the court, unaffected by the proof; and we can conceive of no good reason why, in a proper case, a decree may not be modified in the respect proposed.” One of the advantages of a court of equity is that its decrees may not only be [449]*449so framed and molded as to protect the relative rights and duties of the parties, but its execution may be controlled, or even suspended for a time, as exigencies arising may require. Formerly decrees were executed by the parties; their obedience being compelled by proceedings in the nature of punishment for contempt, attachment, or sequestration. Statutes providing for other methods of enforcement, as by execution, are not usually construed to deprive the court of the power of general supervision of the enforcement of its decrees. Moreover, our statute expressly authorizes: “A defendant against whom a judgment has been rendered, or any person interested therein, ■ diBCHARGE of judgment. having matter of discharge which has arisen since yie judgment, may upon motion, in a summary way, have the same discharged, either in whole or in part, according to the circumstances.” By “defendant” is meant the party against whom the judgment or decree has been entered, and not necessarily the defendant in the suit; and the term “judgment” is employed in the statutory sense, being any “final adjudication of the rights.of the parties in an action.” Section 3769, Code.

The original decree determined that McCook held title as trustee, which might be divested upon the payment of a fixed amount by Tyrrell. If, because of matters transpiring ' subsequent to the entry of decree, Mc-Ocok had been partially or fully paid, either from rents and profits by him collected, or from any other source, plaintiff or Tyrrell had the undoubted right to in-, voke the jurisdiction of the court, either under the statute quoted, or by virtue of the inherent powers a court of equity may exercise over its decrees, and have the demand, to that extent, satisfied. That this was done by a pleading denominated a “supplemental petition,” instead of a motion, ought not to deprive them of the remedy.

[450]*450But for the answer of defendant, it should have been treated as a motion, and all therein aside from that relating to a proper accounting and application of the rents 5. issues sub-decreedd°-termination regarded as surplusage. And had McOook been content to submit plaintiff’s motion, without raising other issues,-there might be something in his objections to the petitions of intervention by the administrator and heirs of Tyrrell. Instead of doing so, he filed an elaborate answer, in six divisions, to which two amendments were added in 1901. The portions remaining after the rulings on demurrers and motion were that defendant had collected rents amounting to $2,104.16, and paid out $534.40; asked an allowance for services of $50 per year; that he had denied Tyrrell’s right to the property in 1886 or 1888, and no effort had been made to enforce the decree or make redemption; that he had been in adverse possession, and the right to the land and the rents had been lost by the running of the statute of limitations. Having raised these issues, he is not in a situation to say that the court might not considerand pass upon any issues raised subsequent to the entry of the original decree. They directly affected the interests of the administrator and heirs, for the former was entitled to the rents collected prior to Tyrrell’s death, and the latter to those collected thereafter. To protect these and the heirs’ claim to the property, they had the right to intervene and by so doing acquiesced in the trial of the issues raised by the defendant. To their petitions he interposed substantially the same matters in defense, and also pleaded that he had been garnished as the supposed debtor of Tyrrell.

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Bluebook (online)
94 N.W. 942, 120 Iowa 444, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dunton-v-mccook-iowa-1903.