67 Iowa 708 | Iowa | 1885
The petition states that the First National Bank of Davenport obtained a judgment against the plaintiff in the district court of Scott county, and that the bank commenced an action in the circuit court of Jasper county to subject the plaintiff’s homestead to the payment of said judgment; that the defendant, who is a practicing attorney, was employed by the plaintiff to defend such action, but that, by reason of the defendant’s negligence, the plaintiff therein obtained a judgment subjecting his homestead to the payment of the judgment in favor of the bank; (First Nat. Bank of Davenport v. Baker, 57 Iowa, 197, and Same v. Same, 60 Id., 132;) that by reason of such negligence the plaintiff sustained damages in the sum of $2,000; and that the defendant had purchased and is the owner of the judgment in favor of the bank, and that he has caused an execution thereon to be issued by the clerk of the district court of Scott county, directed to the sheriff of Jasper county, who' lias levied the same on the plaintiff’s homestead, situated in Jasper county. The relief asked is that such ‘ damages be ascertained, and the same set off against said judgment, and' plaintiff offers to pay any excess there may be. It is further' asked that the defendant be enjoined from selling plaintiff’s homestead under said execution. The defendant, Ryan, filed' an answer to the petition, and for the purposes of this opinion it will he conceded that he admitted all the allegations of the petition. lie also pleaded an affirmative defense,' which need not.be stated. The defendants moved the court to change the place of trial, and to dissolve the injunction on
I. It is insisted that the court erred in overruling the motion to change the place of trial, on the ground that the defendants were residents of Jasper county, and that the action was a personal action. We are of the opinion that this is a personal action, and that the motion should have been sustained. Code, § 2586. The plaintiff undoubtedly seeks to recover a judgment against Ryan on the ground of negligence. He clearly is not entitled to any relief unless he establishes the negligence alleged, and that he is entitled to damages. This, therefoi*e, is a personal action against Ryan. The statement of the proposition demonstrates it, and argument in its support might have a tendency to obscure what is so apparent. Section 3396 of the Code provides that when “proceedings in a civil action, or on a judgment or final order, are sought to be enjoined, the suit must be brought in the county and court in which such action is pending or the judgment or order was obtained;” and it is said, as the object of the action was to obtain an injunction against the enforcement of the judgment by the sale of the plaintiff’s homestead, that no other court than the one in which the judgment was obtained had the jurisdiction and power to grant the injunction. Conceding this to be so, the injunction was auxiliary only, and pertains merely to the remedy, and therefore cannot have the effect of changing what would otherwise be a personal action into something else. It is true that, where the object of an action is to declare the judgment or final order to be invalid, the action must be brought in the court in which the judgment or order was obtained. It has been so held. Lockwood v. Kitteringham, 42 Iowa, 257; Anderson v. Hall, 48 Id., 346; Bennett v. Hanchett, 49 Id., 71; Grattan v. Matteson, 51 Id., 622. But in the case at bar the validity of the judgment is conceded. It does not appear that it is inherently defective. It is conceded that the judgment
The object of the statute is to prevent a conflict between courts. Hence the action contemplated by the statute is required to be brought, not only in the same county, but in the same court. If the action is brought to set aside the judgment or order upon the ground that it should not have been entered, or for any reason which inhers in or grows out-of the judgment, there is much reason in requiring it to he brought in the court which rendered the judgment, and such a case is evidently contemplated in the statute. So, too, if the object of the action is to declare it invalid for some reason which existed at the time the judgment was rendered. But suppose that some matter has arisen since the judgment was rendered, — such as payment,- — why should the action to enjoin its enforcement be brought in the same court ? In the case at bar, the plaintiff seeks to enjoin the judgment, not on the ground that it never should have been entered, or that it is invalid, or should not be enforced, hut because facts which have occurred since the judgment was entered make it inequitable to enforce it by the sale of his homestead. This is an independent cause of action which has accrued since the judgment was rendered, and we think such a case is not within the spirit and intention of the statute, and may therefore be brought in any court having jurist diction of the parties and subject-matter.
II. In our opinion, the court erred in overruling the motion to dissolve the injunction. Much that has been said is applicable to this question. The defendant has a valid judgment against the plaintiff which he seeks to enforce by the sale of property upon which it is a lien. The plaintiff
Reversed.