Ernst v. Ernst
This text of 178 N.W.2d 907 (Ernst v. Ernst) 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.
Opinion
This is an appeal from summary judgment in a land registration proceeding in favor of James E. Ernst and his wife, Joan L. Ernst (hereafter simply “James”), applicants for registration of title, and against Edward J. Ernst, a brother of James, and his wife, Bernitta M. Ernst (hereafter, “Edward”), unnamed answering defendants seeking to establish an interest in the land to be registered. The nature of the issue raised and its [491]*491limited determination require consideration of four separate actions involving these litigants.
Action No. 1. The action which is the subject of this appeal is the registration proceeding itself. At the instance of James, who holds a vendee’s interest in a contract for deed, an application for registration was instituted in the name of the fee owner, Charlotte Schaefer, in October 1964, which was followed by a cross-application by James on February 24, 1967. The summons was not served upon Edward, for there was at that time no subsisting claim of interest by Edward, but Edward had actual notice as early as January 11, 1967, of the pending Schaefer application and, apparently, that James’ cross-application was to follow. It was not until February 12, 1969, however, that Edward interposed an answer in the registration proceedings, asserting a partnership interest with James in this land.1 On May 26, 1969, the district court, as a result of a consent order of dismissal with prejudice in an intervening action, infra, ordered that Edward’s answer be stricken and summary judgment be granted to James. This appeal is from the judgment entered pursuant to that order.
Action No. 2. In April 1965, almost 2 years before James’ registration application but a few months after the Schaefer application, Edward commenced an action in district court asserting a partnership interest in subject land and seeking reformation of the contract for deed establishing James’ vendee’s interest in the land. After several false starts in settlement negotiations,2 James and Edward made a written stipulation on [492]*492January 11, 1967, signed by each of them and their respective attorneys, by the terms of which Edward conveyed his interest to James and agreed that his action against James was to be dismissed with prejudice. The district court, pursuant to the stipulation, which was incorporated in its order, dismissed Edward’s action with prejudice on January 20, 1967. The dismissal in this action was the basis for the district court’s April 25, 1969, order granting summary judgment in the torrens proceeding.3
Actions No^s. § and 4. On June 14, 1969, Edward commenced an action against James to void the January 11, 1967, stipulation and to vacate the January 20, 1967, order of dismissal, alleging (as in his answer in the registration proceeding) that it was the product of James’ “fraudulent promises and misrepresentations”; but this action was voluntarily dismissed on July 22, 1969. On July 29, 1969 (after the appeal herein was taken on July 3, 1969), Edward commenced another action different only in that it alleged both coercion and fraud and asked, in addition, for a money judgment. At the same time he filed a notice of lis pendens against subject property pursuant to Minn. St. 557.02.
The basic issue is whether an opposing claim of title may be asserted against the applicant in a registration proceeding where the same claim had been asserted and dismissed with prejudice in a prior action between the parties; stated otherwise, whether the opponent in the registration proceeding is estopped by a final order, entered by consent, determining the same issue in another action. If the dismissal with prejudice may not be collaterally [493]*493attacked in the registration proceeding, as we hold in agreement with the trial court, Edward’s answer was properly stricken and, there being no genuine issue of fact, James was entitled to summary judgment.
An order dismissing an action with prejudice operates as an estoppel to litigate again the issue raised in that action. The principles of res judicata apply with respect to an appealable order after the time for appeal has expired. The only reservation is whether such an order, being entered by consent, constitutes the requisite adjudication upon the merits. We held on analogous facts in Pangalos v. Halpern, 247 Minn. 80, 76 N. W. (2d) 702, that it did. Plaintiff in that case was administratrix of an estate; defendants were the attorneys for plaintiff in the probate of the estate. A compromise settlement in the probate dispute provided for payment of $9,000 to the defendants, the settlement being approved by both the probate and district courts. Almost 3 1/2 years later, plaintiff moved the district court to vacate the settlement and the judgment of dismissal in the prior proceedings on grounds of improvidence and fraud. The motion was denied. Thereafter plaintiff brought an action against defendants to recover the $9,000 paid them pursuant to the settlement. The trial court granted defendants’ motion for a directed verdict on the ground that the order of the probate court approving the settlement was res judicata. We affirmed, stating (247 Minn. 85, 76 N. W. [2d] 706):
“* * * In the absence of fraud, a valid judgment, decree, or as here an order which is the equivalent thereof, entered by agreement or consent, operates as res judicata to the same extent as if it had been rendered after contest and full hearing and is binding and conclusive upon the parties and those in privity with them.”
See, also, State Bank of New London v. Western Cas. & Surety Co. 287 Minn. 339, 178 N. W. (2d) 614.
[494]*494It is true that the Pángalos principle has not been universally followed for the reason that consent to dismissal of an action may be induced by practical and expedient considerations divorced from the merits. See, Annotation, 2 A. L. R. (2d) 514, especially §§ 11 and 12; see, also, Hentschel v. Smith, 278 Minn. 86, 153 N. W. (2d) 199. We think, however, upon the extensive record of negotiations in this case, that it may be fairly said that the parties intended that the dismissal was to serve as a final determination of the issues in dispute. The principle is sound in relation to this land registration proceeding, moreover, for the purpose of this statutory proceeding is to inquire into and determine the rights of respective claimants to land and to declare and fix definitely the estate or interest each has and to enter a decree accordingly. As stated by R. G. Patton and Carroll G. Patton in Registration of Titles and Conveyancing Applied to Registered Titles, 29 M. S. A. 435, 458, “The court has, therefore, no power * * * to award affirmative relief to a defendant independent of the registration of title.”
Our decision is based upon the fact that a final order of dismissal with prejudice has not been vacated. Edward’s opportunity to establish his claim in his pending action against James, protected as he presumably is by the notice of lis pendens,4 is not necessarily foreclosed. As James observed in his brief, “If appellants have a right to maintain their action, they will have their day in court in the [fourth action] and since they have filed a notice of lis pendens, they have sufficiently and adequately protected their claimed rights in the property, if such [495]*495they have.”5
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
178 N.W.2d 907, 287 Minn. 490, 1970 Minn. LEXIS 1148, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ernst-v-ernst-minn-1970.