Gaer v. Bank of Baker

122 P.2d 828, 113 Mont. 116, 1942 Mont. LEXIS 9
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 6, 1942
DocketNo. 8,262.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 122 P.2d 828 (Gaer v. Bank of Baker) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Montana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gaer v. Bank of Baker, 122 P.2d 828, 113 Mont. 116, 1942 Mont. LEXIS 9 (Mo. 1942).

Opinions

MR. CHIEF JUSTICE JOHNSON

delivered the opinion of the court.

This aetion was brought against the defendant by Olga M. Anderson Westrope, the widow of Elmer J. Anderson and administratrix of his estate, solely in her representative capacity, and by two of the other five heirs at law individually, to set aside a mortgage given defendant to secure loans theretofore made by it to pay expenses of administration. There was no *119 contention that the sum named in the mortgage was not owing to the defendant. The contentions were that there was fraud in the proceedings for the authorization of the mortgage, and that regardless of the fraud issue the judge was absolutely .disqualified to make the order under which the mortgage was •executed, in that he was at the time a stockholder in defendant bank. The order in question was not for the execution of a mortgage to defendant, but for the negotiation of a loan to pay the debt to defendant, and for a mortgage to secure such new loan; but being unable to obtain a loan elsewhere for that purpose, the administratrix executed a mortgage direct to the defendant.

The answer joined issue with plaintiff’s complaint and included also a cross-complaint for the foreclosure of the mortgage. The trial court found in favor of the defendant on all issues and ordered the foreclosure of the mortgage.

Plaintiffs appealed on the two issues mentioned; and this court (Gaer v. Bank of Baker, 111 Mont. 204,107 Pac. (2d) 877) sustained the judgment as to the alleged fraud, but reversed it by reason of the judge’s absolute disqualification under section 8868, Revised Codes, and ordered the cause remanded for appropriate modification of the judgment, which necessarily included the setting aside of the provision for foreclosure of the void mortgage.

This court pointed out in its decision that the mortgage was absolutely void as to Mrs. "Westrope in her representative •capacity, and therefore as to the estate and the heirs generally, but not as to any interest which Mrs. Westrope might have personally in the estate property, since she had participated in the mortgage proceedings. The matter was mentioned in order to make the effect of the decision entirely clear as to .all concerned, although Mrs. Westrope individually was not a party, and regardless of her personal obligations under the mortgage she was entitled, in her capacity as administratrix, to have the mortgage declared void and its foreclosure, which had been decreed against her only as administratrix, set aside.

*120 This court also pointed out that the amount owing to defendant admittedly represented costs and expenses of administration and constituted a charge upon the estate property; and that while the plaintiffs (including Mrs. Yfestrope as administratrix but not personally) “are entitled to have the mortgage set aside, ’ ’ this would not prevent the defendant from enforcing payment under the probate code.

The trial court after remittitur entered a modified judgment and decree in which it recited: “It appearing to the court from an examination of said decision of the Supreme Court upon said appeal that the mortgage executed by plaintiff, Olga M. Anderson Westrope, as Administratrix of the Estate of Elmer-J. Anderson, deceased, and the order of the District Court of the Sixteenth Judicial District of the State of Montana, in and for the County of Fallon, in the probate proceedings upon the estate of said deceased, authorizing said mortgage, were both null and void, and it appearing further that the remainder of' said judgment and decree, including the Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law, except for the findings and conclusions-with reference to said order and mortgage, were left undisturbed and were and are in full force and effect.”

It then proceeded to make findings of fact and conclusions of law, some of which will be referred to below, and to adjudge and decree (1) that the mortgage in question “was and is null and void, and is hereby cancelled and set aside”; (2) that the foreclosure sale “is hereby vacated, set aside, and held for naught, and all proceedings pursuant to the portion of the original judgment in this action requiring the foreclosure of said mortgage, are hereby vacated and set aside”; and (3) “that there is past due and owing from the estate of Elmer J. Anderson, deceased, and from the plaintiff Olga M. Anderson Westrope, as Administratrix of said estate, to the defendant, The Bank of Baker, a corporation, the full sum of $3,384.27 principal and interest, including taxes paid and interest, all of which was advanced by the said defendant to said estate? *121 and the administratrix thereof, for costs and expenses of administration, of said estate, and all of which constitutes a •charge upon the property of said estate.”

Subsequently Mrs. Westrope having been removed, the present administratrix was appointed and moved the trial court to modify the modified judgment and decree in the respects hereinafter mentioned in her specifications of error. Her motion for modification having been denied, she and the other plaintiffs have attempted to appeal from the order of denial. However, aside from the blanket specification that “the court erred in making the order denying plaintiff’s motion to modify,” and •one other, all of the specifications of error are that “the Court erred in including in the Modified Judgment and Decree, and in -denying the Plaintiff’s Motion to Strike, the following,” etc.

In other words, this is primarily an attempt to appeal from what this court has uniformly held on the authority of Stewart v. Salamon, 97 U. S. 361, 24 L. Ed. 1044, not to be appealable,—namely, a judgment entered by the trial court pursuant to this court’s remittitur. (Kimpton v. Jubilee Placer Mining Co., 22 Mont. 107, 55 Pac. 918; Phelps v. Great Northern Railway Co., 71 Mont. 56, 227 Pac. 65; Lloyd v. City of Great Falls, 107 Mont. 588, 87 Pac. (2d) 187.)

As this court pointed out in the Kimpton Case, supra, this •court’s decision disposes of the merits, the issues have become res judicata, the actual entry of judgment pursuant to remittitur is ministerial rather than judicial, and the attempted appeal is •“from a judgment rendered by this court and entered by the district court. ’ ’ Obviously no appeal lies from this court to this court. If such an appeal lay and were successful the result would be another decision and still another modified judgment pursuant to the new remittitur, from which still another appeal might be taken, thus further delaying justice and harassing the prevailing party. Obviously no such result is either appropriate or jiistifiable.

What could be the result of the new decision and remittitur if such an appeal did lie f It could not affect the first decision, *122 which is final, the time for rehearing having expired.

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Bluebook (online)
122 P.2d 828, 113 Mont. 116, 1942 Mont. LEXIS 9, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gaer-v-bank-of-baker-mont-1942.