64 A. 23 | N.H. | 1906
The exception to the ruling that the attachment in Abbott v. Daniels was dissolved by the discontinuance of that suit with the intention of abandoning it, and that the court had no authority or power to restore the attachment, raises the only questions of law that have been transferred. "When a judgment is rendered for the defendant upon which execution may issue, or when the action is compromised or dismissed, the attachment made in the action is dissolved thereby." P. S., c. 220, s. 34. "An attachment is made by an officer who is authorized to serve the writ, and when it is once dissolved, vacated, or released, the court has no power to revive it." Murphy v. Hill,
There is no motion to vacate the judgment presumably entered the defendant in Abbott v. Daniels in November, 1903, or to strike off the entry of discontinuance; but as justice could not require the restoration of Abbott's attachment unless it could be some use to him, and as he could not obtain judgment against Daniels so long as the judgment originally entered stood, the finding that justice required the attachment should be restored implies that facts appeared upon which the former orders could be set aside, or an understanding that the mere restoration of the case to the docket had such effect. "Merely bringing an action forward and entering it upon the docket is . . . matter of course whenever it is desired to make any motion in regard to it, and the convenience of the parties would be promoted by doing so. But bringing an action forward does not vacate a judgment." Nihan v. Knight,
It has not been understood that a judgment for the defendant in the trial court, subsequently found to be erroneous and set aside at the law term, was yet valid and effectual to destroy the plaintiff's attachment, but the statute appears to be intended to give full relief by treating the judgment as rendered by mistake. In the present case, it is found that justice requires that the plaintiff's attachment should be treated as in force, and no rule of law requires it to be regarded as dissolved by a judgment which has been erased from the record. In jurisdictions where a judgment is a lien upon the debtor's estate, it is held that the setting aside of an order vacating a judgment restores all the liens originally attached to the judgment, except as to rights acquired in the meantime. King v. Harris,
In the case of an order of judgment for the defendant subsequently set aside upon exceptions to this court, the plaintiff might lose the whole value of his exception if the attachment were dissolved by the judgment in the superior court. Yet such judgment would be one for the defendant upon which execution may issue. The cases Hackett v. Pickering,
Unless the court are powerless to correct errors of law or fact in orders made in a case, it is clear that an erroneous judgment for the defendant cannot affect, when reversed, the lien of the plaintiff's attachment after judgment for him. Mullin v. Atherton,
As already suggested, this finding implies the conclusion that the judgment in the suit Abbott v. Daniels should be vacated, and the case discloses evidence to warrant such a conclusion. The case, however, contains the further finding that "the action Abbott v. Daniels was voluntarily discontinued by the plaintiff in that suit, without fraud or mistake, with the intention of abandoning the action." This finding appears to be in conflict with the earlier finding as to what justice requires. The only explanation of the two findings that occurs to us is that the latter may relate solely to the entry of the order of discontinuance; for it seems hardly probable that the entry would have been made by the plaintiff or his counsel with knowledge of the facts and their legal effect which have been considered decisive in this action. It is unnecessary to attempt to reconcile the seeming conflict of the case. If legal cause for setting aside the judgment in Abbott v. Daniels appears, the granting of a motion therefor will restore the plaintiff's attachment; while if the true interpretation of the case is that there was no accident or mistake in the disposition of the case made in November, 1903, there will be no ground upon which to reverse the judgment for the defendant, and no question as to the validity of the attachment can arise.
Case discharged.
All concurred. *595