116 Cal. 1 | Cal. | 1897
This is an appeal by the defendants from a judgment against them entered on the twenty-eighth day of November, 1895.
The facts of the case, as they appear upon the record,
On the fifteenth day of August, 1895, more than a year and a half after the entry of said judgment, plaintiff’s attorneys served upon defendants and their attorneys a notice that on the thirtieth day of September, 1895, or as soon thereafter as a hearing could be had, they would move the court “on all the papers on file in this action, and the records of said case,” for leave to amend the said judgment entered on the 28th of November, 1893, so that it should read in accordance with the form of judgment annexed to said notice, and
It is quite clear that the court had no jurisdiction to enter this second judgment. The failure to enter such a judgment as the plaintiff desired in the first instance, in 1893, was not the result of any inadvertence, or the misprision of the clerk. The case does not come within any of the authorities cited, which hold that, where the clerk has failed to enter the judgment ordered by the court, or has failed to enter any judgment after a decision rendered by the court, and the record shows what judgment should have been entered, there such a judgment may be entered as will conform to the actual decision of the court. In the case at bar, it is not necessary to inquire whether the paper marked “opinion” was properly allowed in evidence, or what the meaning of that paper is. The decree, as entered in 1893, was signed by the judge, and, under any view, it was his last direction to the clerk, and was the decision of the case. It has been held that it is unnecessary for a judge to sign a judgment, although it has been the almost invariable custom in this state for decrees in equity to be so signed; but, where the judge does sign the decree, his signature, as was said in Estate of Cook, 77 Cal. 227, 11 Am. St. Rep. 267, is intended “to give the clerk a surer means of correctly entering what has been adjudged.” In this case, therefore, the judgment was entered by the clerk exactly as the court ordered it to be entered, in the surest way in which the judge could express his intention. There was, therefore, no mistake or misprision of the clerk; and, if there was any error committed in rendering the judgment, it was a judicial error which could be remedied only by appeal or motion for a new trial. To allow a judgment to be radically changed on mere motion, a year and a half after it had been entered, for no other reason than that contended
The judgment appealed from is reversed.
Temple, J., and Henshaw, J., concurred.