13 Minn. 66 | Minn. | 1868
By the Court Tbis is an appeal by plain
A provision of the same kind is contained in the New York Code. Under these statutes the Courts, both of that State and our own, have construed the “merits of the action,” as used in this connection, to be the strict/ legal rights of the parties, as contra distinguished from those mere questions of practice which every court regulates' for itself, and from all matters which depend upon the discretion or favor of the Court. Megrath vs. Van Wyck, 3 Sand., S. C. R., 750; Choteau, et al., vs. Parker, 2 Minn., 118. If therefore the order involves the strict legal rights of the plaintiffs, and is not a mere question of practice, or a. matter of discretion, it is appealable.
A final judgment determines the rights of the parties to the action in which it is rendered, and the party in whose favor it is rendered may proceed to enforce the judgment in accordance with its terms. Any order of the Court which cancels it, or modifies its effect, or suspends its operation, or the right of the plaintiff to enforce the same, materially affects the legal rights of the party in whose favor it is rendered, and under the authorities involves the merits of the '
"We are inclined to the view urged by the defendant’s counsel, at least to this extent, that “though the order appealed from failed, through inadvertence, to set aside the decree, in terms, it both in law and fact suspends and supercedes it,, to the extent necessary to permit the defendant to put in issue.the allegations of the complaint, or to interpose other equities and defences by answer,” and so far as this question is concerned is appealable.
"Was it within the discretion of the Court to make the order ? Extending the time to plead, permitting amendments to pleadings, and permitting new pleadings to be served, are, as a general rule,- questions of practice, and addressed to the discretion of the Court. If, however, in any instance, the authority of the Court to permit these, or similar acts, is limited and defined by statute, the power is discretionary only so far as it is exercised in accordance with the statute.
The judgment in this case was perfected on the '4th of April, 1866, and was notice to the parties from that time. The order appealed from was not made till August 14, 1867, nor was the motion upon which it is based made till the 29th of July, 1867. More than one year, therefore, had elapsed before the making of the motion or the order. The statute limits the time within which applications for relief of
The order is therefore appealable, and not having been made within one year from the time the judgment was perfected, and because notice to the defendant is erroneous and must be reversed.