Olе Aune, owner of a residence property in Sioux Falls, sold it on an executory contract to Fred M. Breneman and Elvina O. Breneman on January 12, 1949. The consideration was $7,000, payable $2,300 in cash and the balance on March 1st 1949. The purchasers took possession at the time of the execution of the contract. After default in the March 1st рayment the purchasers commenced an action to rescind the contract on the ground of fraud and to recover the consideration already paid. Thе vendor answered denying the claim of fraud and alleging a counterclaim for the foreclosure of the contract on the ground of the purchasers’ default. At the trial thе purchasers’ complaint was dismissed on the merits and judgment of foreclosure was entered on the counterclaim, allowing the purchasers three months from the service of the notice of entry of judgment within which to pay the principal and interest due on the contract and the costs of the action. The purchasers appealed and the judgment of the circuit court was affirmed by this court in Breneman v. Aune,
The strict foreclosure statute provides: “* * * unless the parties against whom such judgment is rendered shall fully comply therewith within the. time specified, such 'judgment shall be and.become final without further order of the Court, and all rights asserted under the contract sued on shall thereupon be forever barred and foreclosed.” SDC 37.3101. The judgment in the fоreclosure action was filed August 16, 1949, and notice of entry of the judgment was served on the same day. The period of time allowed for compliance with the judgment expired on November 16, 1949. On December 16, 1949, the purchasers applied for and obtained an order fixing the amount of the undertaking for stay of execution on appeal at $1,250. On Dеcember 21, 1949, the undertaking and the notice of appeal were served on the vendor.
The question here is the effect of the stay of execution. SDC 33.0727 provides: “Whenever an appeal shall have been perfected and the proper undertaking given or other act done prescribed by this title to stay the execution or рerformance of the judgment or order appealed from, all further proceedings thereon shall be thereby stayed accordingly * * The stay of execution suspеnds “further proceedings”, and preserves the status quo pending the determination on appeal and the filing of the remittitur in the circuit court. Nothing in this statute indicates that the stay of proceedings shall do more than suspend the judgment and preserve the status quo from the time tthe stay becomes effective until the filing of the remittitur. “But as a rule it does not revеrse,annul, or undo what has already been done; and in most jurisdictions the judgment, order, or decree is not vacated or annulled, nor its validity or effect impaired thereby.” 3 C.J., Appeal and Error, § 1446, 4 C.J.S., Appeal and Error, § 662.
*327
The Supreme Court of Minnesota said in Woolfolk v. Bruns,
In the case of Hovey v. McDonald,
Hey v. Harding, 25 Ky.Law Rep. 1454,
*328 In the case of Runyon v. Bennett, 4 Dana, Ky. 598, 29 Am.Dec. 431, it was said: “ ‘A supersedeas suspends the efficacy of the judgment, but does not, like a reversal, annul the judgment itself. Its object and еffect are to stay future proceedings, and not to undo what is already done. It has no retroactive operation, such as to deprive the judgment of its force аnd authority from the beginning, but only suspends them after and while it is itself effectual. A consequence of this is that whatever is done under the judgment after and while it is superseded, being done without аuthority from the judgment, which is then powerless, and against the authority and mandate of the supersedeas, should be set aside as improperly and irregularly done; but that whatever is dоne according to the judgment, before the supersedeas takes effect, is upheld by the authority of the judgment, and is not overreached by the supersedeas.’ ”
Respondent cites Morgan v. Williams,
For the reasons stated the time allowed by the judgment for compliance with the terms of the contract was not extended by the supersedeas оr the stay order, and the judgment in case Number 9262 is reversed with directions to enter judgment for the plaintiff for the relief demanded in the complaint.
On November 12, 1949, the purchasers obtаined an order for a sixty-day stay of all proceedings except the entry of judgment and the taxation of costs until their motion for a new trial should be decided, and until Decеmber 22, 1949. This order did not become effective until it was filed on December 14, 1949, nearly a month after the time for performance fixed by the decree had expired. It did not extend the time allowed for performance of the contract for the same reason that the supersedeas was ineffectual for that purpose.
Thereafter and on April 24, 1951, Aune, the vendor, commenced another action for the recovery of possession of the property on the ground that more than three months *329 had elapsed since the filing of the remittitur in Breneman v. Aune, supra, and the failure of the purchasers to pay the balance due under the contract. The purchasers defended this action • on the ground that within three months after the filing of the remittitur in Breneman v. Aune, they made a tender to the vendor of all sums due under the contract and that this tender was refused. Judgment was entered in that action determining that the vendor was entitled to immediate possession of the property and that the purchasers no longer had any right, title or intеrest therein and directed the sheriff of Minnehaha county to remove them from the premises. From this judgment the purchasers appealed. The appeals in this casе and the other forcible entry and detainer case were consolidated by stipulation of the parties. The tender, if it was a tender, was not made within the time allowed for performance of the judgment in Breneman v. Aune, supra, and therefore did not constitute a defense in that action. The judgment in this case is therefore affirmed.
