Grimm v. Sargent

179 Iowa 750
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedApril 3, 1917
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 179 Iowa 750 (Grimm v. Sargent) 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
Grimm v. Sargent, 179 Iowa 750 (iowa 1917).

Opinion

Salinger, J.

l. judgment : correction: statutos governing, I. Defendant pleaded a judgment in Case Number 23771, Polk Dis- , ~ trict Court, as an adjudication. He did this in Case Number 24724, the instant case. In a reply, plaintiff presented matters which he claimed made the earlier judgment' ineffective as to him. An at-[752]*752lack upon this reply was overruled, but that ruling is not complained of on this appeal. After some evidence had been taken in the instant case, the trial judge seems to have concluded that, unless corrected in certain particulars, the judgment pleaded by defendant would operate as an adjudication in the case then bn trial. He-suggested a transfer to equity in order to effectuate these corrections. Upon this suggestion, plaintiff then and there filed a motion asking such transfer. Defendant’s objections were overruled, the cause transferred, and thereafter, the court decreed that the earlier judgment should be corrected.

One ultimate complaint is that this correction is a nullity because an act beyond jurisdiction. In support of this contention, much is presented which, addressed to such complaint, is irrelevant:

a. Many citations set forth the 'general principles of the law of former adjudication. It is conceded that, without the correction, the judgment is a bar, and as corrected, it does not work an adjudication. The sole question is, therefore, whether the court erred in making the correction. It is manifest that upon such question the general principles of res adjudicaba require no consideration.

b. There is no occasion for the citations.which assert that there is a presumption that a judgment is on the merits rather than in abatement. This, too, is immaterial, because whatever judgment defendant had was undeniably on the merits.

Beaching now what is relevantly addressed to the claim that the trial court acted without jurisdiction, we find the following claims and arguments, pro and con:

2- coSectson3-1 proawfe.mss *Uow" a. Appellant says the application 'was rna^e ^00 la^ because some 11 months lapsed between it and the' entry of the judgment which it sought to correct. He cites cases which may be conceded to hold that, if this were an

[753]*753attempt to proceed under the statutes for vacating and modifying judgments, the application comes too late. On the other hand, appellee relies on certain of our decisions, 'such as Lambert v. Rice, 143 Iowa 70. This case, and many more we have examined, do have general language that time limitations made by statute are inapplicable. This language must be limited to what these cases deal with, namely, nunc pro tunc entries. No such entry is involved in this case. On the other hand, neither is the statute law on the vacation and modification of judgments; for, on the authority of McConnell v. Avey, 117 Iowa 282, at 285, the proceeding at bar does not come within that statute law, but is controlled by statutes which deal with the correction of records for mistake.

It may be added, too, that it does not appear when, if at all, the record of the judgment that was corrected was signed. The related point, that the correction is a nullity because a judgment can be changed only by a direct proceeding, by appeal, “or some other method known to the law,” is not well taken, because the proceeding to correct was a direct proceeding, was a method known to the law, and because appeal is not the sole method of making corrections in judgments.

s. judgment: correction: when notice not necesb. The abstract proposition that notice }s essential to a valid correction of a record ;g) 0f course, undeniable. But neither it nor Owen v. Smith, 155 Iowa 463, help appellant. Defendant and his counsel were in court when the transfer was ordered, took part in the resulting hearing, and made no objection on the score of want of notice. See Chicago, I. & D. R. Co. v. Estes, 71 Iowa 603; McConnell v. Avey, 117 Iowa, at 285, and also Hurley v. Dubuque G. L. & C. Co., 8 Iowa 274.

[754]*7544. judgment: unta^yfssues.1' c. In a way, the point is made that a judgment beyond the issues is void for want of jurisdiction. There may be authority for the proposition abstractly stated (see Judge v. Powers, 156 Iowa 251; Reynolds v. Stockton, 11 Sup. Ct. Rep. 773, at 776); but this rule has no application .where the parties voluntarily try an issue not tendered in the pleadings. Moreover, this case does not present a total want of issue tendered. The issue of correction was formed by a motion and a resistance thereto. True, that motion was very fragmentary and inartificial in form, but appellant made no objection on that score. In no view urns, there judgment beyond issue.

5' ííSsdicttoñ: instead of law: effect. d. Appellant cites cases for the proposition that equity will not correct where a correction sought might have been ob- °* ° tained by pursuing' a remedy which the law affords. That is so. But giving relief in equity when there is an adequate remedy at law is not, in strictness, to act without jurisdiction, but is error, merely. While it has been said loosely that equity has no jurisdiction where law affords an adequate remedy, it is not true that the acts of the chancellor are a nullity because he grants what the Iuav might do.

e.Finally, it is said the correction is a nullity because it was not sought in the very case in which the judgment corrected was entered, and because it was made- without any petition, application “or proceeding therefor.” We have already seen that there was an application' or proceeding to obtain correction. We .think these objections, too, do not go to jurisdiction, but assert what is, at most, error.

On the whole, we are persuaded that, in the circumstances at bar, the court had jurisdiction. "

[755]*755e. judgment-. foÍmded°béiief ’ attorney. an<1 [754]*754II. The record rather indicates that all the testimony [755]*755was taken before there was a transfer to equity.. But we treat- it as adduced on the chancery hearing, because both sides so deal with it. Though the court below had jurisdiction, .the issues below and here are such as that .we must next inquire whether, though having power to act, it acted rightly, In concrete form, the question is whether the evidence sustains the decree. The action of the court was invoked by motion. Leaving out of consid- ■ eration whether that motion presented more than one ground, it certainly did present as one that the judgment should be corrected because the trial judge and the attorneys for plaintiff mistakenly believed that E. I. Sargent, the defendant in the present case, had not been served with original notice in the earlier case. This presents two questions: (1) Is the allegation proven? (2) If proven, does it justify the correction made?

The judge who tried the earlier case testifies that he gave judgment because- of such mistaken belief. The record demonstrates that, though he believes this to be true, he is mistaken. He directed a verdict-on the merits, and thereby held, as matter of law, that there was no evidence that the present defendant was guilty of the negligence declared on. Had.

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