61 Wis. 427 | Wis. | 1884
Upon the appeal from the order of May 26, 1884, the following opinion was filed:
The judgment was announced by the court and a minute thereof made by the clerk, and a formal judgment drawn up and signed by the judge on the 23d day of September, 1882, but such formal judgment in writing and the findings were not filed until the 2d day of March, 1883, and the costs were taxed and entered in a blank thereof on the 17th day of February, 1883. Notice of the entry of said judgment was given on the 16th day of March, 1883. On the 7th day of July, 1883, an appeal was taken from said judgment to this court, and return made thereon on the lltlx day of July, and filed in this court on the 13th day of July, 1883. The judgment was affirmed by this court on the 20th day of November, 1883, and the remittitur was filed on the 21s£ day of January, 1884. On the 28th day of March, 1884, notice of a motion for a new trial under the statute and of the undertaking to pay costs was served, and at the same time all the costs in this court and the circuit court in the case were tendered to the defendant’s attorneys and refused. This motion was denied without prejudice on the 22d day of April, 1884. On the 19th day of May following, notice of a like motion, referring to the files and accompanied by an affidavit of the facts, was served, but by accident service was made one day too late, and objection w;as
. The last motion, at least, was denied on the ground that the one year had expired since the rendition of the judgment, and that it was, therefore, too late for the application to vacate the judgment and grant a new trial in the action under sec. 3092,E. S. That section is: “The court in which any such judgment [in ejectment] shall have been rendered, otherwise than upon failure to answer, shall, upon application of the parties against whom the same was rendered, his heirs, etc., within one year from the rendition thereof, ■vacate the judgment and grant a new trial upon condition that all costs recovered thereby, or awarded on affirmance of such judgment on appeal or writ of error, be paid, and that the applicant execute and file an undertaking with sufficient sureties, in such sum as the court shall direct, to the effect that he will pay all costs and damages which may be finally awarded the other party.” The section then provides that the time- during which the action may be pending in the supreme court, from the taking of the appeal to the filing of the remittitur, shall not be reckoned a part of such one year.
The first question presented is one of practice,— whether a formal motion and notice thereof are necessary to such application to vacate the judgment and grant a new trial. The language of the statute is mandatory and imperative. The court shall, upon application, vacate the judgment and grant a new trial within one year from the rendition thereof. The court shall do this, not that the party shall make application within one year. If the application is made on the last day within one year, the court shall vacate, etc., within
Mr. Tyler, in his work on Ejectment, 635, in construing similar language in the statute of Hew York, uses the word “must” to express its mandatory character. “The court must vacate the same and grant á new trial upon the proper application, and upon payment of the costs and damages.” It is a matter of right, and the application cannot be refused. Sedg. & W. Tr. Title to Land, § 578; Rogers v. Wing, 5 How. Pr. 50; Schrodt v. Bradley, 29 Ind. 352; People ex rel. Dennison v. Circuit Judge, 37 Mich. 281. It is said in Chamberlain v. McCarty, 63 Ill. 263: “By a fair construction of the statute under consideration it was certainly the intention of the legislature to give to each party a new trial as a matter of course, upon compliance with the statute.” It being a matter of course, it is ex parte and requires no notice. 2 Tiff. & S. Pr. 428; 4 Wait’s Pr. 595; 1 Whit. Pr. 352.
It follows that any one or all of the applications in the several motions brought to the attention of the court were sufficient and complied with the statute.
The other and more difficult question is whether such application was made in the time required by the statute. The language to be considered is: “ Within one year from the rendition thereof, vacate the judgment and grant a new
When was this judgment perfected so as to allow of its vacation and the granting of a new trial upon application, within the meaning of the statute? To construe this, or similar statutes of limitation, too much stress must not be given to such words as “ rendition ” or “ entry,” as applied to the judgment. In sec. 3039, E. S., both of these terms are used to designate the same time. The time of appeal or writ of error “ is limited to two years before the entry of such judgment, except when the party is under disability when such judgment is rendered, or.at the time of the rendition thereof,” etc. They are here used interchangeably. The old law provided that no judgment should be reversed by this court unless the writ of error was sued out within four years next after the rendition of the judgment. Ch. 193, Laws of 1850 (sec. 2902, E. S.), makes the judgment a lien on land “ when so docketed.” An execution may issue when the judgment has been given, etc., by sec. 2965, E. S. Sale on foreclosure shall not be made until the expiration of one year from the date of such judgment. Sec.-3162, E. S. Many other statutes may -be found where the same or other words are used, and they may have the same or a different meaning as they are used in the statute. This action was tried by the court, and a finding of facts was necessary, and
In Stansell v. Corning, 21 Mich. 242, under a similar statute, it was held that when the cause is tried by the court without a jury, and a written finding demanded, “ until such finding there can be nothing on which to found the judgment,” and that the judgment should no more precede the finding than it should the verdict of the jury when the case is so tried. In Michigan, the statute allowing the first new trial in ejectment is in the same language as ours, excepting the time limited is “within three years after the rendition of the judgment,” instead of one year; and in People ex rel. O'Blinskie v. Judge Circuit Court, 34 Mich. 62, it was held that no judgment was or could be rendered until after the findings of fact by the court; and when a finding had been once made and judgment rendered thereon, and additional and further findings were made at the request of the defendant, long after the first, it was held that the three years began to run from such last findings. The exceptions were made to the findings in this case on the 21st of March following their being filed, and could not have been made before they were filed, preparatory to an appeal from the judgment. Rut the decisions of this court clearly require the perfection of the judgment by the taxation of the costs and their insertion therein before such a limitation would begin to run..
In Bonesteel v. Bonesteel, 30 Wis. 151, it was held that, until the costs are adjusted and inserted in the judgment,
It would seem to be as necessary that the defeated party in ejectment should have one year in which to pay the costs and vacate the judgment against him, as that the defendant in foreclosure should have the one year in which to pay the costs in order to redeem. In either case he is entitled to know, during the whole year, just what he is bound to pay to obtain relief. The language of the section under consideration is, “upon condition that all costs recovered
The appellant had the right to keep trying to obtain his new trial by repeated applications, and the circuit court as often erred as they were denied.
By the Court.— The order of the circuit court, appealed from in this case, is reversed, and the cause is remanded
Upon the appeal from the order of May 27, 1884, the following opinion was filed:
This is an appeal from an order, dated May 27, 1884, denying the motion for the vacation of the judgment, and for a new trial. A similar order, dated May 26, 1884, having been reversed on the previous appeal in this case, and the cause remanded with direction to vacate the judgment and grant a new trial upon the conditions named in the statute, it is only necessary to reverse the order from which this appeal was taken, on the same grounds stated in the opinion in the other case.
By the Court.— The order of the circuit court is reversed.