154 Iowa 87 | Iowa | 1912
No procedendo was issued or called for until some time in August of the year 1906; but on the 30th of that month one was issued over the hand and seal of the clerk of this court, directed to the district court of Lee county, which contained the following citations and order: “Whereas the supreme court of said state 'being lately certified of the record and proceedings in a certain cause which was in said district court, wherein Chicago, B. & Q. By. Co., plaintiff, and Peter Kelley et al., appellants, defendants, wherein there was an appeal from the order and judgment rendered in the district court to the supreme court, and the said court having duly examined the record and proceedings aforesaid, in the premises, at Bes Moines, in said state, on the 8th day of April, 1898, did modify and affirm the judgment aforesaid, as rendered in the court below, . . . and order further proceedings to be had in said court, not inconsistent with the opinion of the supreme court. Therefore, you are hereby commanded that, with the speed which of right and according to law you may, you proceed in the manner required by law and in harmony with the opinion in this court, anything in the record or proceedings aforesaid heretofore certified to the contrary notwithstanding.” This procedendo was evidently sent to the attorney for Kelley, and he had possession thereof until during the trial of this case, when it was
Acting, no doubt, upon the assumption that there was a final decree in the original action, either in this court or the district court, requiring the defendant herein to redeem and that the defendant failed to make this redemption, plaintiff herein commenced this suit to quiet his title against the defendant on the theory that, as it did not redeem, his title became absolute within ten years at most from the time of the filing of the opinion in this court in the appeal taken of the original case. Plaintiff’s claim, of course, must he bottomed upon the .decree in the other case, and defendant is bound by whatever the decree is found to have decided on all questions which might have been settled in that litigation. From the record of the original case it is apparent that the decree actually entered is binding upon both parties as to all matters in issue or which might have been litigated in that action.
In determining the effect of the decree as originally entered in the district court of Lee county, we may and should go to the pleadings to see what was actually decided; and in doing so we find it was adjudicated that the railroad company was the fee owner of the property, and that Kelley had no right whatever to the possession thereof. If was also found that the tax deed under which he claimed title was void as against the railroad company. Upon appeal this court in its opinion held that Kelley’s tax title under which he claimed was not absolutely void,
There were no further proceedings in the district court, and no procedendo from this court was ever filed there until the trial of this case. So that the only final decree ever entered save 'the one in this case is in the district court of Lee county, and this cut off all of Kelley’s rights in and . to the property. These propositions seem clear enough, although plaintiff’s counsel cite some cases which they claim hold to the contrary, among them Mahaffy v. Farris, 144 Iowa, 226; Pace v. Heinley, 85 Iowa, 733; Frost v. Parker, 65 Iowa, 178; Clayton v. Sievertsen, 115 Iowa, 687. None of these cases are in point, as an examination will show.
With the full record before it, however, the trial court awarded to plaintiff the sum of $41.50, which it found had
In view of the entire record, we think that the trial court should have entered the judgment already indicated, and that it was right in taxing the costs to plaintiff. The final decree should be modified so as to give plaintiff judg