111 Wash. 483 | Wash. | 1920
The plaintiff brought this action in equity to set aside a judgment claimed to have been induced by perjured testimony. To the second amended com
On the 26th day of December, 1916, the action was brought in the superior court of King county to foreclose the Prance mortgage. The holder of the Perkins mortgage was a party to the action. The controversy there was one of priority. The Bennington County Savings Bank claimed that its mortgage was superior, and the holders of the Prance mortgage made a like claim as to their mortgage. In that action it appeared that A. C. Petridge, the son of H. B. Petridge, had signed and delivered the Perkins mortgage without the knowledge or consent of his father. H. B. Petridge testified that he had not signed the Perkins mortgage or authorized it to be signed in his name,, and had no, knowledge thereof until after he had executed the; Prance mortgage. The trial resulted in a judgment
To sustain the right to maintain this action it is necessary that the complaint allege facts which show that the judgment in the action on the mortgages was induced by fraud. If there were fraud, it was in the fact that H. B. Petridge had testified falsely in that action. It is a settled rule in this state that perjury alone is not an equitable ground for setting aside a judgment obtained on false testimony, in the absence of extrinsic or collateral fraud. McDougall v. Walling, 21 Wash. 478, 58 Pac. 669; Friedman v. Manley, 21 Wash. 675, 59 Pac. 490; Meeker v. Waddle, 83 Wash. 628, 145 Pac. 967; Robertson v. Freebury, 87 Wash.
In the Robertson case the question was thoroughly reexamined and the rule of the prior cases adhered to. It was further held in that case that the perjury or false testimony, even if admitted, is not sufficient to relieve a case from the force of the rule. If it be assumed that H. B. Petridge testified truthfully in the criminal action and that, as á result of such testimony, the judgment of conviction was reversed by this court, this amounts to no more than an admission that his testimony in the civil action was false and untrue. The case of Rowe v. Silbaugh, 107 Wash. 518, 182 Pac. 576, is distinguishable. There, there was extrinsic or collateral fraud which induced the superior court to assume jurisdiction and render judgment in the case. In that case there was an affidavit of nonresidence which was in fact not true. In both the cases of Robertson v. Freebury and Burke v. Bladine, supra, an excerpt is quoted with approval from Pico v. Cohn, 91 Cal. 129, 25 Pac. 970, 27 Pac. 537, wherein there is pointed out what will constitute extrinsic or collateral fraud, one instance being the keeping of the unsuccessful party “in ignorance of the suit.” The Silbaugh case falls within that class. There the unsuccessful party was kept in ignorance of the suit, even though residing on the land in controversy.
To hold in this case that the false testimony in the civil case constituted fraud, in view of the course taken by the criminal case, and therefore was not within the rule of the cases above cited, would be to make a distinction where no substantial difference exists.
The judgment will be affirmed.
Holcomb, C. J., Parker, Mackintosh, and Mitchell, JJ., concur.