8 P.2d 461 | Idaho | 1932
On May 31, 1928, Vivian F. Baldwin and E.R. Baldwin, respondents, obtained a judgment for damages for personal injuries, in the district court, against Singer Sewing Machine Company, a corporation, and Ed. Anderson. On appeal the judgment was affirmed as to Anderson, and ordered dismissed as to the Singer Sewing Machine Company. (Baldwin v. Singer SewingMach. Co.,
July 18, 1931, the Chief Justice signed an order, on application of appellant, reciting the two appeals last above mentioned, and ordering "That but one transcript be made and filed in said appeals which said transcript shall include all the papers and matters necessary for the consideration of each of said appeals, and that a duplicate of this order be filed in said District Court from which said appeals are taken and included in said transcript." Other matters germane to the subject of this appeal will later be referred to.
Appellant petitioned this court for an order to correct an omission in the clerk's transcript, which matter was argued and submitted with the motion to dismiss. His praecipe called for the order of the Chief Justice of July 18, 1931, therein required to be filed in the district court, to be included in said transcript. While the order appears in the records in this court it does not appear in the transcript. The fact of its being filed in the court below is immaterial in view of the conclusions reached as to the motion to dismiss, and the motion is therefore denied.
We are only concerned here with the motion to dismiss the appeal of July 13, 1931, from the judgment of June 23, 1930. Respondent moves to dismiss the appeal, principally, because it was not taken within ninety days as prescribed by C. S., sec. 7152. Appellant contends that the order of August 12, 1930, vacating the judgment of June 23, 1930, was not void and therefore suspended the running of the statute requiring an appeal to be taken within ninety days from the entry of judgment, until the coming down of the remittitur on June 3, 1931, and that forty days yet remained, on July 13, 1931, in which to perfect its appeal.
The power, within proper limits, to vacate its judgments, is inherent in all courts of record independent of *617
statute. (1 Freeman on Judgments, 5th ed., sec. 194, p. 375.) While we have no statute expressly authorizing the vacation of a judgment, on motion, the inherent power of courts of record to vacate their judgments, void upon the face of the judgment-roll, upon motion of a party, or its own motion, at any time, has been repeatedly recognized by this court. (Angel v. Mellen,
We have heretofore held the judgment of June 23, 1930, valid and not void. (Baldwin v. Anderson, supra.) The status of the order of August 12, 1930, was not an issue in that case since appeal would lie therefrom whether it was void or merely voidable. The question now here is whether or not said order was void.
"In addition to jurisdiction of the parties and the subject matter, it is necessary to the validity of a judgment that the court should have jurisdiction of the question which its judgment assumes to decide, and jurisdiction to render a judgment for the particular remedy or relief which the judgment undertakes to grant." (33 C. J. 1076, sec. 37; 15 C. J. 729, sec. 24; Miller v. Prout, supra; Wright v. Atwood,
The language of the opinion in Miller v. Prout,
The order of August 12, 1930, vacating the original judgment, against appellant, was a nullity, and the ninety days within which an appeal might be taken (C. S., sec. 7152) began to run from the entry of said judgment on June 23, 1930. This appeal, taken more than ninety days after the entry of said judgment, does not vest this court with jurisdiction to entertain the same. (Wallace v. McKenna,
It is not considered necessary to discuss other grounds for dismissal urged. The appeal from the judgment of June 23, 1930, is therefore dismissed. Costs to respondent.
Lee, C.J., and Leeper, J., concur; Budge, J., dissents.
Givens, J., not sitting, did not participate. *619