1 N.D. 121 | N.D. | 1890
Lead Opinion
This is an action for equitable, relief, in which the plaintiff asks to have certain taxes levied upon plaintiff’s land by the county of Ramsey and city of Devil’s Lake, in 1885, set aside as void, and the record thereof canceled and annulled, and also that the tax certificates describing said lands, issued by the county treasurer, at the tax-sale of 1886, to the
The testimony admitted upon the trial of this action shows that the plaintiff, prior to the commencement of this action, instituted the action pleaded in bar for the purpose of setting aside and canceling the said tax levies of 1885, and to enjoin the county of Ramsey from selling plaintiff’s said lands at the tax-sale of 1886. In the former action plaintiff alleged as a sole ground for relief that the lands in question were exempt from taxation for the same reasons which are set out in the complaint in this action. In the former action the defendants answered to the complaint, and plaintiff demurred to the answer for insufficiency. Argument upon the issues presented by the de
The trial court, among other findings of fact, found that “the order pleaded in defendants’ answer was never succeeded by a final judgment in said action based thereon.” So far as it is a matter of fact, the evidence justifies this finding of the district court. It appears that the order (so-called “judgment”) was filed with the court more than 20 days subsequent to its date, and on October 27, 1886. The clerk of the district court testified with respect to the order as follows: “It is the original of the page I have read from the judgment docket.” It nowhere appears from the testimony, and was not claimed upon the argument in this court that the clerk of the district court ever at any time was directed by the district court, or by the attorneys in the former action, to transcribe the order in question into the judgment docket or other record book in his office. So far as appears from the testimony, the act of copying the order into the judgment docket was purely a voluntary act on the part of the clerk of the district court, and was therefore unauthorized, unless it was the duty of the clerk, under the law, to record such an order at length in the docket. We think it was not his duty to do so. It does not appear that the order was ever entered in
The date of transcribing the order into the docket does not affirmatively appear from the testimony, but a very strong presumption arises that it was not done until the matter of the taxation of the costs referred to in the order was first disposed of. The order contemplates that at a time subsequent to its date the costs of the action were to be taxed and inserted in a judgment which is directed ,‡,0 be entered in the future on a certain contingency. The process of taxing costs includes notice to the defeated party, and hence clerks of courts do not, ordinarily, enter a judgment until the costs are taxed. There is no ground in the record for supposing that the clerk departed from the ordinary practice in this case. The record shows that costs were not taxed; but it appears that the defendants, without notice to plaintiffs counsel, filed an instrument waiving costs with the clerk of the district court on the 8th day of June, 1888, which date is long subsequent to that of commencing the present action. In the absence of countervailing evidence, the presumption from the record is that the clerk followed the usual practice in the district court, and entered the order, as a judgment, promptly upon the filing of the waiver of costs in his office, and did not do so before that event. This being the case, there certainly was no judgment entered in the former action prior to the commencement of this action. It may be argued that the entry of a judgment is not essential to its validity. The statute requires that such entry shall be made; but whether an ordinary judgment must be entered before it takes effect as such is foreign to the question before us, for the reason that the order under consideration is not, and does not purport to be, a final judgment. In form, it is primarily an order made upon an issue of law raised by a demurrer. After disposing of the question raised by the demurrer, the court directs the en.
But the order is not a bar for still another reason. It is this: The defendants in the two actions are wholly different, and they are not in privity with each other. In the first action Bamsey county and the city of Devil’s Lake, as corporations, were the only defendants. In this the county treasurer and the purchaser of the lands at the tax-sale of 1886 are the only defendants. The relief sought in the two actions is not the same. The purpose of the first action was to cancel and set aside the tax proceedings of 1885, and to enjoin the county of Bamsey from selling the lands at tax-sale. In the present action the plaintiff is seeking
We deem it not improper to add here, as a matter of history, that this case was originally appealed to the supreme court of the territory of Dakota, and was decided by that court. Bode v. New England Investment Co., 42 N. W. Rep. 658. Subsequent to its decision, upon application of defendants’ counsel, a rehearing was granted, but such rehearing was never had in the territorial court, and the case came to us as a part of our inheritance from the territory and was reheard here. The territorial court did not discuss the question as to whether or not there was a final judgment, in fact or in law, in the former action, but expressly avoided doing so, and assumed, for the purposes of the decision, that the alleged judgment was a judgment, and was final, and then proceeded to hold that the same was not a bar to this action, because it was not an adjudication which involved the merits of this action. We reach the same result, practically, but prefer to rest our decision upon the preliminary questions presented by the record.
The questions involved in this action, upon the merits, are identical with those presented in the case of Farrington, Trustee, v. the Defendants in this action, ante, 102, (decided at the present term.) The disposition of this case will be governed
Concurrence Opinion
concurs in the disposition of the case upon the ground that there is no privity between parties defendant in the two actions.