225 N.W. 282 | Minn. | 1929
Plaintiff brought suit on a promissory note. The litigation extended over a period of some three years. An appeal to this court is reported in
The present motion was not made until one year and one month after the entry and satisfaction of the judgment. The trial court held that plaintiff's motion came under G. S. 1923 (2 Mason, 1927) § 9283, permitting the court to reopen, amend, modify, or vacate a judgment at any time within one year after notice thereof and that, *371
as the motion was made more than one year after entry of the judgment, it came too late. Notice to a party who himself enters a judgment in his own favor is of course not required. Plaintiff seeks to avoid the one-year limitation on the theory that the judgment was incomplete because costs and disbursements had not been taxed and inserted therein. Our cases hold that, for the purpose of appeal by the judgment debtor, the judgment is not complete until costs and disbursements are taxed and inserted therein, where it appears that the judgment is incomplete in that respect and that the right to tax costs has not been waived. Richardson v. Rogers,
But a failure to tax and include costs in a judgment is an irregularity only, and the validity of the judgment is not affected thereby. Costs constitute a part of the judgment and are to be included therein, and errors in taxing or refusing to tax costs can only be reviewed on an appeal from the judgment, with reference to that part thereof involving such costs. Closen v. Allen,
The motion comes here as an application to reopen the judgment for the purpose of litigating the question of attorney's fees and to amend the judgment accordingly. The fact that the judgment as entered failed to include costs and disbursements and so did not operate to limit the time within which defendants might appeal therefrom, does not have the effect of extending the time for moving for relief under § 9283. It may reasonably be inferred that one of the purposes of that section was to have judgments, incomplete or imperfect in any way, perfected within the year, so as to be thereafter final and unassailable.
In Morehart v. Furley,
Order affirmed.