Gаil, a Cedar Rapids police officer, recovered substantial damages for personal injuries he suffered when an intoxicated driver rammed his police car during a high speed chase. We affirmed that judgment in a previous appeal.
Gail v. Clark,
Gail and his family brought a dram shop action against Western, as well as claims against other defendants. The other defendants settled prior to trial. A jury awarded a verdict of $1,261,000 and judgment was entered for that amount. Western applied for pro tanto credit for the amounts received in the settlements with thе other defendants. In the resistance to the application, the Gails requested the court to “make it clear ... Western is required to pay interest on the full amount of the judgment ... without considеration of the amounts credited.” For the most part the district court granted the motion, stating:
The court rules that the interest of said sums for which pro tanto credit was given shall draw lawful interest from the date that the petition was filed until the date they were paid to plaintiff and not thereafter. Aftеr said date plaintiff could have invested the funds as he saw fit. Ruling as to interest is so ordered.
As mentionеd, in the appeal to this court which followed the interest award was not challenged.
While thе prior appeal was pending and before it was submitted to our court we held that prejudgmеnt interest should accrue only on the net recovery after pro tanto credit.
Duggan v. Hallmark Pool Manufacturing Co.,
I. Where a court has jurisdiction over the pеrson and the subject matter of a case, no error in the judgment can make it void.
Mahaffa v. Mahaffa,
A judgment merely voidable because based upon an erroneous view of the law is not open to collateral attack, but can be corrected only by a direct review.
Marshfield Homes, Inc. v. Eichmeier,
II. The motion for entry of satisfaction of judgment here was clearly a collateral proceeding. Its purpose was to avoid paying the interest ordered in the previous ruling. The Gails raised this issuе in the previous proceeding. The trial court ordered Western to pay prejudgment interest on the amounts credited from the date of filing until the date they were paid. The order was clear in its award of interest. Because Western did not challenge the interest award on appeal the order must be allowed to stand. 1
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III. We have long adhered to what is known as the United States Rule regarding computation of interest when payment is made toward retiring a judgment.
See, Smith, Twogood & Co. v. Coopers & Clarke,
We conclude that the trial court’s original order on interest was voidable, not void, and was subject only to direct attack. Western did not attack the order in its first appeal. This collateral attack cannot be allowed. The judgment of the trial court must be and it is hereby reversed and remanded.
REVERSED AND REMANDED.
Notes
. Western argues the district court properly clarified its original order. Western’s position in essence views the subsequent order as an order nunc pro tunc. But it is not the purpose of nunc pro tunc order to correct a judicial conclusion or mistake of law.
Headley
v.
Headley,
