Garner v. State ex rel. Moon

28 Kan. 790
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedJuly 15, 1882
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 28 Kan. 790 (Garner v. State ex rel. Moon) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Garner v. State ex rel. Moon, 28 Kan. 790 (kan 1882).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Horton, C. J.:

The judgment of the trial court, which we are asked to review and reverse, is based upon the validity of a prior judgment, rendered May 31,1878, in the action of The State of Kansas, on the relation of Daniel Hammond, against the plaintiff in error as county clerk of Rush county, allowing a peremptory writ of mandamus to issue against Garner as such county clerk, commanding him to remove immediately all the books, papers, documents, effects and things belonging to the office of county clerk of the county of Rush, to La Crosse, and thereafter to keep the office of county clerk at said town, and adjudging the town of La Crosse to be the county seat of Rush county. In that action, Hammond, the, relator, set forth in his alternative writ that he considered himself aggrieved at the result of the election held in Rush county on the 12th of February, 1878, for the purpose of relocating the county seat of Rush county; that there was malconduct and fraud on the part of the board of commissioners [793]*793in said county in its action in ordering the election, in this: that the county seat had been, by a vote of the electors of the county, relocated on the 27th day of February, 1877, at the town of La Crosse; that there was no petition having the legal number of petitioners presented to the board, or filed in the office of the county clerk of the county, at the time the order for the new election was made; that the legal number of electors in the county, as ascertained from the last assessment rolls preceding the filing of the pretended petition, asking for a relocation of the county seat, was three hundred and eighty-one; that the number of names on the pretended petition was two hundred and forty-two ; that of the number appearing on the pretended petition, there were the names of forty-five persons who were not at the time of presenting the petition or signing the same, legal electors of the county, and there were also on the petition the names of five persons who did not sign the petition, or authorize anyone to sign their names for them. The petition contained the names of the alleged illegal petitioners, and also the names of the petitioners whose names were forged thereto. The petition further set .forth that at the election, the town of Alexandria received one vote for the county seat; that the town of La Crosse received one hundred and twenty-seven votes, and the town of Walnut City received two hundred and thirty-four votes; that certain illegal votes were oast and counted 'for Walnut City, giving the names and. numbers thereof; that certain legal votes were - offered in favor of La Crosse and refused, giving names of the parties offering to vote and the number thereof; that a majority of all the legal votes cast were in favor of La Crosse for the county seat; and that Walnut City was illegally declared the chosen county seat.

It is contended by counsel for plaintiff in error that as no-evidence was introduced upon the trial of the cause had on May 31, 1878, and as the'court failed to make any special findings of fact as prescribed by § 9, ch. 79, Laws of 1871, the judgment was and is utterly void. ■ ' Counsel overlook the proposition that a judgment may be irregular or erroneous, [794]*794and not void. Conceding for the purpose of argument that the judgment was erroneous, it cannot be said to be void, as the court had jurisdiction of the parties and the subject-matter. Therefore the judgment is binding and conclusive until vacated or reversed, and we must hold it operative for all that that term implies. To illustrate: Section 290 of the code requires a court, upon the trial of questions of fact, on the request of either of the parties to the action, to state in writing the conclusions of fact found separately from the conclusions bf law. Now if a district court having jurisdiction of the parties and subject-matter enters judgment in a case where •questions of fact are involved, and a jury is waived by the parties, but fails to state conclusions of fact and of law in accordance with the request of one of the parties, the judgment rendered by it would be erroneous, but clearly not void. In such a case the right of a party to have the court make separate conclusions of fact and law is a substantial right, and a judgment will be reversed for a refusal to grant such a right. (Briggs v. Eggan, 17 Kas. 589.) But this is a very different thing from a void judgment. Likewise, the action •of the court in allowing a peremptory mandamus upon the failure of the defendant, to answer the alternative writ without the introduction of evidence, at most was only error, but not a sufficient ground to declare the judgment a nullity. The court had jurisdiction, and whether all of its proceedings were strictly in accordance with the provisions of the act under which the action was prosecuted, and whether proper proof was introduced to sustain that judgment, we need not inquire. The defendant was present in person upon the rendition of the judgment, and also appeared by counsel. He then excepted to the judgment, and was allowed by the court fifty days in which to make a case to have the rulings and judgment of the district court reviewed. He neither took advantage of his exceptions, nor prosecuted any writ of error, and therefore he is not now in any condition to insist that the judgment can be treated as a nullity by him. We think, ¡moreover, that this judgment is continuing as against the [795]*795plaintiff in error as long as he continues in office as county-clerk of Rush county, whether it be under his first election, or a subsequent reelection. It is moreover contended that plaintiff in error satisfied the judgment of the 31st of May}> 1878, by removing and keeping his office at La Crosse for a time. The original action of mandamus is likened by counsel to one of forcible entry and detainer, where A gets a judgment against B, and upon a writ of restitution B is ousted from the premises, and after his eviction reenters and assumes possession. Not so. The judgment of the 31st of May, 1878, was a continuing one, not merely for the plaintiff in error to remove to La Crosse with his office, but to keep it there. A temporary removal to La Crosse, followed soon after by a change to Walnut City, was not substantial compliance with the terms of the judgment. We suppose, upon proper application having been madé by the relator in the first action, that the plaintiff in. error might have been punished after his return to Walnut City for his refusal and neglect to perform the duty enjoined by the peremptory writ of mandamus. It is said, however, that the plaintiff is excused from a further compliance to the writ of mandamus of May 31, 1878, because on the 7th of June, 1878, one of the justices of this court issued an alternative writ commanding him as county clerk of Rush county to go to Walnut City with his books, papers and records, and to keep his office there or to show cause for not so doing. That proceeding does not figure in this controversy, because upon the final judgment entered in that case, it was expressly provided that the judgment-rendered “was not to conclude--or be a bar to the action of any other person, in any suit properly brought by such person concerning the subject-matter of the dispute.” This judgment, therefore, in no way affected the rights of the relator in the first action, or the rights of any'other person. To the alternative writ issued by this court, the plaintiff in error did not set up the judgment of the district court, nor any matter affecting the proceeding in which that judgment [796]

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Bluebook (online)
28 Kan. 790, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/garner-v-state-ex-rel-moon-kan-1882.