Mozley v. Potteiger

18 P.2d 1021, 37 N.M. 91
CourtNew Mexico Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 30, 1933
DocketNo. 3751.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 18 P.2d 1021 (Mozley v. Potteiger) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Mexico Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mozley v. Potteiger, 18 P.2d 1021, 37 N.M. 91 (N.M. 1933).

Opinions

BICKLEY, J.

Plaintiff sued for personal judgment for balance due upon a written building contract, to recover price of construction of a building, and for a foreclosure of a mechanic’s lien upon the premises improved. Defendant appeared, and, upon a trial, the court, on August 31, 1931, rendered judgment against'defendant: “For three hundred ten dollars ($310) together with attorney’s fees and costs, for which let execution issue.’’

The judgment contains the further recital:

“And it is further ordered, adjudged and decreed that the mechanics and materialmen’s lien be and the same is hereby foreclosed and that unless within sixty (60) days hereafter the defendant, George Potteiger, pay or cause to be paid to the plaintiff the sum herein adjudged to be due, the real estate hereinabove described shall be sold at public auction to the highest and best bidder for cash, * * *
“Ordered that Joseph Gill be allowed the sum of $50.00 for foreclosure of the said mechanics lien, as provided by See. 82-213 Compiled Laws 1929, 'the same to be paid by the defendant.”

On October 1, 1931, the defendant moved to vacate and set aside the decree and for a corrected decree, for the following reasons:

“That the decree entered herein is contradictory and inconsistent in that one of the paragraphs of said decree provides that defendant, Potteiger, shall pay the sum of $310.-00, plus attorney’s fees and costs within sixty days, while the other paragraph provides for a Judgment for $310.00 with attorney’s fees, and directs the issuance of an execution without sixty days stay of execution, and that the Plaintiff is seeking to take advantage of his decree on the chancery side of the court, relieved of its sixty days stay of execution, in order to levy on persona! property of the defendant, under a Judgment for money, which of necessity, must have been granted on the Law side of the Court.
“That this proceeding is essentially an equitable proceeding wherein Plaintiff sought by foreclosure to establish a mechanic’s Lien upon certain real estate of the defendant.
“That in the event that the Plaintiff had sought a money judgment, then defendant would have been entitled to a jury trial.
“That Plaintiff having elected to pursue his course upon one of the contradictory Judgments, or decrees, rendered by this Court, has thereby waived his right to take advantage of the other, or the Decree granted on the Equity side of the Court.
“That the $50.00 attorney fee now included in the amount for which execution was issued, is not collectable under execution upon a money Judgment granted by a court of Law.
“That the title of the document signed by the court, to-wit: ‘Decree’ is misleading and incorrect in that the so-called decree purports in part to be'a Judgment, which could not have been rendered under the pleading filed by Plaintiff wherein he sought the aid and relief afforded only by a court of Equity.”

On October 8,1931, after hearing on the motion, the court vacated the decree “for the purpose of entering a correct decree herein,” and then recalled the execution theretofore issued on the judgment forming a part of the judgment and decree.

Erom this order plaintiff, Mozley, appeals. The parties will be referred to herein as in the court below.

The court, in sustaining the motion of defendant, said: “The motion was filed a day too late to bring it within the thirty day period during which the court has control of a judgment for purpose of correction or amendment, consequently some irregularity must he shown if the motion is to be sustained. The court signed a final decree after it had been initialed by attorneys for both parties and, because it had been thus approved, the court did not read it or consider its terms. The complaint presents but one cause of action and there is no problem of joinder of causes of action. The complaint is an ordinary bill in equity seeking foreclosure of mechanic’s lien and praying for a deficiency judgment, and the court intended to give no decree except for foreclosure. The court is aware that mere legal error does not constitute an irregularity and the mere inclusion of a personal judgment in a decree would not in itself constitute an irregularity, but 'the inclusion of a personal judgment creates a situation which the court thinks is manifestly an irregularity because the terms of the decree are so inconsistent as to make it unenforeible. In one paragraph the defendant is given sixty days within which to pay, while in another paragraph it is ordered that execution issue for the entire amount of the judgment. The decree on its face is wholly irreconcilable, inconsistent and ambiguous, and this circumstance, the court feels, constitutes an irregularity. The court desires to correct this decree and is glad to seize upon the patent inconsistency to give him jurisdiction.”

Appellant, plaintiff below, presents the following points upon which he bases his claim for reversal:

“1. Has the trial court jurisdiction to vacate, set aside or modify the decree entered in this cause on August 31, 1931, on motion filed by defendant more than thirty days thereafter.
“2. Is there any irregularity shown in the record as a basis for vacating or modifying the decree more than thirty days after its entry.
“3. Is the plaintiff entitled to a judgment both in personam and a decree foreclosing the mechanics lien under the findings in this decree.”

On this review, the primary question is whether there was irregularity in the judgment which gave the court jurisdiction to vacate it within one year. 1929 Comp. St. § 105-846.

The learned trial judge found the irregularity to consist in the fact that the judgment embraced both a recovery in personam and an order of foreclosure and sale. Not, as he !says, that the inclusion of the personal judgment itself would be an irregularity, but that its inclusion with the award of immediate execution is wholly irreconcilable with the grant of sixty days for the payment of indebtedness adjudged before the property subjected to the lien could be sold, and that this inconsistency renders the judgment ambiguous and unenforceable.

The court was doubtless correct in saying that the mere inclusion of a personal judgment would not constitute an irregularity. Porter v. Alamocitos Land & Livestock Co., 32 N. M. 344, 256 P. 179.

We fail to understand where the inconsistency is to be found in the judgment, or how it becomes ambiguous or unenforceable. The two forms of relief granted are independent of each other. We see no inconsistency in the result that appellant was allowed to have his execution at once, while his foreclosure sale must be postponed for sixty days. His execution sale would require four weeks’ pub< lication. He already had his mechanic’s lien. To give him the execution simply permitted him to acquire an execution lien.

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Related

State Ex Rel. Hill v. District Court of Eighth Judicial District
439 P.2d 551 (New Mexico Supreme Court, 1968)
Mozley v. Helmick
18 P.2d 1024 (New Mexico Supreme Court, 1933)

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Bluebook (online)
18 P.2d 1021, 37 N.M. 91, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mozley-v-potteiger-nm-1933.