19 Wash. 614 | Wash. | 1898
The opinion of the court was delivered by
The motions to dismiss the appeal and strike the statement of facts are denied. Appellants, who are plaintiffs, commenced an action in the superior court praying for judgment against defendant for $550.88, the remainder alleged to be due on account. Both plaintiffs and the defendant were engaged in the plumbing and heating business, and had sundry transactions between themselves, furnishing goods to each other, and from time to time comparing accounts. Defendant made answer to the com
The only question we deem it proper to consider is the vacation of the judgment upon the motion for a new trial and the entering of judgment subsequently without a trial. It is maintained by counsel for respondent that the correct judgment was entered, and that the final judgment may be considered in the nature of a modification or correction of the first judgment; that is, that if the pleadings show that the correct judgment was entered, it ought not now to be disturbed. But, as has been observed, the issues of fact made by the pleadings are misty and the haze that sur
•Dunbar and Anders, JJ., concur.
I dissent. I think the judgment was only what it should have been under the pleadings, and, if anything occurred in the lower court not shown by the record, it should be presumed to have conduced to the judgment rather than otherwise. If the judgment was right, the fact that it was entered in appellants’ absence would be, at most, harmless error, not warranting a reversal.