Hansen v. McCoy & McCoy

266 N.W. 1, 221 Iowa 523
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedMarch 17, 1936
DocketNo. 43188.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 266 N.W. 1 (Hansen v. McCoy & McCoy) 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
Hansen v. McCoy & McCoy, 266 N.W. 1, 221 Iowa 523 (iowa 1936).

Opinion

Stiger, J.

The plaintiffs, appellants, filed their petition at *524 law against the defendants in the Mahaska county district court, in September, 1933, for the October term of said court.

While motions of defendants to strike were pending, and after the case had been on the calendar of said court four successive terms, the trial court on November 30, 1934, being the last day of the October, 1934, term of the said district court, made the following judgment entry:

“Now on this day this cause came on for hearing and said cause is hereby dismissed for want of prosecution and it is ordered by the court that the defendants, McCoy & McCoy et al., recover from the plaintiffs, Harry Hansen and Glen Hansen, the costs of this action, taxed at $-. To all of which the plaintiffs except. ’ ’

At the time the judgment was rendered, Rule 6 of the Rules of Practice of the Sixth Judicial District, was in full force and effect having been duly adopted by the judges of the district in 1931, and were filed and entered of record in the records of the court, and published in the bar dockets of the county and district.

Said rule reads as follows : Rule 6. “It is ordered that all cases which have been on the calendar for four successive terms shall be dismissed for want of prosecution at the next term thereafter, unless for good cause shown.” Such a rule is more or less common in the district courts of this state and has the sanction of this court. O’Mara v. Ry. Co., 156 Iowa 701, 137 N. W. 942.

At the time the judgment was entered, this case had been on the calendar of the Mahaska county district court for four successive terms and was dismissed on the next to the last day of the fifth term from the time of the filing of the case.

Appellants appeal from the judgment dismissing their suit for want of prosecution and allege the following errors for reversal :

(A) The case was not at issue.

(B) The case had not been assigned for trial and could not be assigned for trial under the state of the pleadings.

(C) The trial court abused its discretion in dismissing the plaintiffs’ petition.

Appellants also contend that neither they nor their counsel were present at the hearing, and that no notice was given them *525 or their counsel that appellees had or would request or move the court to dismiss the suit.

The record discloses no notice on appellants of the hearing, and appellees do not claim that there was notice.

We are not favored in the record with any construction that may have been given Rule 6 by the court or bar in their practice.

With regard to appellants’ first three assignments of error, (A), (B), and (C), we state that Rule 6 contains no exception or qualification of the requirement that cases which have been on the calendar for four consecutive terms shall be dismissed for want of prosecution at the next term thereafter, except the proviso, “Unless for good cause shown.”

The appellants have appealed to this court because of alleged error on the part of the trial court without first having given the trial court an opportunity to correct such errors.

The appellees have filed a motion to dismiss the appeal which reads as follows:

“Come now the appellees, McCoy & McCoy, John N. McCoy and Hugh B. McCoy, and move the court to dismiss this appeal, for the reason that appellants, under section 12827, of the Code of 1935, are not entitled to maintain this appeal and are not entitled to a reversal in this ease, because the error complained of could have been corrected on motion in the District Court and no such motion for correction of the alleged error was there made; and for the further reasons urged in the appellees’ brief and argument now on file in this case, which is hereby referred to and made part hereof. That for the said reasons the appellants have no right to prosecute this appeal. ’ ’

In support of said motion, the appellees have referred us to certain code sections.

“12827. Motion to correct error. A judgment or order shall not be reversed for an error which can be corrected on motion in an inferior court, until such motion has been there made and overruled.”
“12787. Judgment vacated or modified — grounds. Where a final judgment or order has been rendered or made, the district court, * * * may, after the term at which the same was rendered or made, vacate or modify the same: * * *
“2. For fraud practiced in obtaining the same. * * *
*526 “5. ■ For unavoidable casualty or misfortune preventing the party from prosecuting or defending. ’ ’
“12791. Motion to correct mistake or irregularity. Proceedings to correct mistakes or omissions of the clerk, or irregularity in obtaining judgment or order, shall be by motion served on the adverse party- or his attorney, and within one year; if made to vacate a judgment or order because of irregularity in obtaining it, such motion must be made on or before the second day of the succeeding term. ”

An appellate court will not pass on an assignment of error upon which the trial court has not had an opportunity to rulé. The trial court cannot be said to have committed an error when its judgment has not been called into exercise. Pigman v. Denney, 12 Iowa 396; Wile v. Wright, 32 Iowa 451; Smith v. Warren County, 49 Iowa 336; Coakley v. McCarty, 34 Iowa 105; Webster v. Ry. Co., 27 Iowa 315; Garvin v. Cannon, 53 Iowa 716, 6 N. W. 122; Shuck v. Ry. Co., 73 Iowa 333, 35 N. W. 429; Belknap v. Belknap, 154 Iowa 213, 134 N. W. 734; Baff v. Waller & Waller, 181 Iowa 1072, 165 N. W. 308; Sullivan v. Paul, 202 N. W. 77; Gelston v. Hoyt, 13 Johns. (N. Y.) 561.

The rule is not changed by the mere fact that an exception is granted. Biley v. Bell, 120 Iowa 618, 95 N. W. 170; Dunshee v. Standard Oil Co., 165 Iowa 625, 146 N. W. 830.

It is the general rule that a judgment may be vacated only by the court by which it is rendered. 15 Encyc. of PI. & Pr. 229.

In Sullivan v. Paul, supra, there was an order dropping the cause from the calendar. The court states:

“The order will not be reviewed here while an application is pending in the lower court to set it aside, upon which full relief can be granted. The appeal is dismissed.”

- In Pigman v. Denney, supra, the original notice had not been served a sufficient length of time to authorize a judgment by default. The defendant appealed from default judgment. The court states:

. “Wé are referred, however, to section 3545 [now section 12827] which provides that: ‘A judgment or order .shall hot be reversed for an error which can be corrected on motion in the inferior court, until such motion has been made there and .overruled,’ and counsel insist that until an effort is made to correct *527

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Hammon v. Gilson
291 N.W. 448 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1940)
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272 N.W. 512 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1937)
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269 N.W. 27 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1936)

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Bluebook (online)
266 N.W. 1, 221 Iowa 523, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hansen-v-mccoy-mccoy-iowa-1936.