119 Iowa 123 | Iowa | 1903
Plaintiff, a stockholder in defendant bank, alleges that during the years 1894 to 1898 defendant
Upon the record presented we think this courtis without jurisdiction to entertain this appeal. The trial court, .after hearing the testimony, is shown to have “filed an -order” stating in substance that it found the plaintiff entitled to the relief demanded, said order concluding as follows: “Whereforeit is considered, ordered, adjudged, and decreed that the plaintiff have and recover of the -defendant the sum of $42.60, with six per cent, interest from the 13th day of March, 1900, together with the costs ■of this action, taxed at $--, and defendant is directed to pay said amount into the hands of the clerk of this court within sixty days from the filing of this order, and in default of so doing the clerk is directed to enter judgment ■for same at the expiration of said sixty days, and to issue ■execution for the same. To all of which defendant excepts, and is given ninety days in which to prepare and file bill of exceptions. Jas. D. Gamble, Judge.” At some later date (at the end of the sixty day period mentioned In the order, as we understand it) the clerk entered ■in the judgment docket (not in the record book) an abstract ■or memorandum as follows: “S. B. Kennedy vs. Citizen’s National Bank. Amt. of judgment, $42.60. Costs, $18.10. .Interest, six per cent. ” This entry constitutes the only ¡attempt by the clerk to enter any judgment pursuant to the order of the court. It has frequently been held that neither the mental conclusion of the judge presiding at a trial, nor the oral announcement of such conclusion, nor
A memorandum of judgment made by the judge is forth e information and guidance of the clerk in making the-proper entry, but until such entry is made there is nothing-from which an appeal will lie. In other words, while in-one sense a judgment is “rendered” when it is announced by the judge, yet until that judgment is entered of record there is no competent evidence of such rendition. It cannot exist or be dependent upon the memory of the officers-of the court or in memoranda not embraced in the record, which the law provides shall be made. Balm v. Nunn, 68 Iowa, 641; Cadwell v. Dallaghan, 74 Iowa, 239; Winter v. Coulthard, 94 Iowa, 312. In Callanan v. Votruba, 104 Iowa, 672, this court had occasion to consider what is-meant by the rendition of a judgment as that term is used in our statute. We there said: “If the record is the only proof of a judgment, as has been repeatedly held, then how can a judgment be said to have been rendered before-spread on the records, when its very existence prior to-that time cannot be established?” In the case then under consideration, as in the one now before us, the trial judge-had made a written form of entry or order for judgment, which was signed by him and filed by the clerk, but no-judgment entry was made in the record book; and of such’ a state of the record we announced the opinion that: “If the court has announced judgment, the clerk may complete the record after the term;.but until the record is-prepared no evidence exists of the rendition of the judgment. These records are under the control of the court, and through them it speaks the final adjudication defined by the statute as a judgment. The Code contains no
This discussion does not involve the rights of the jjarties as they may.be affected by a record entry of judgment nunc pro tune. Doughty v. Meek, 105 Iowa, 16; Day v. Goodwin, 104 Iowa, 374. The paper signed and filed by the trial judge in the present case was very evidently intended to indicate to the parties the conclusions at which ■he had arrived, but, for the purpose of permitting payment or adjustment of the-elaim without further'litigation
There is no such showing her.’, and the appeal must be DISMISSED.