2 N.W.2d 549 | Minn. | 1942
Defendant did not appear at the trial, although she was duly notified. Thereupon the court proceeded with the trial. At the trial plaintiffs were permitted to amend their complaint to allege that the work was done and material furnished in deepening a well upon premises constituting defendant's "homestead," describing the same by its legal description. The court made a finding, which was incorporated in the judgment in plaintiffs' favor, that the work was done and that the material was furnished in deepening the well on defendant's "homestead," describing it according to the legal description. On October 19, 1939, a transcript of the judgment was filed with the clerk of the district court of Ramsey county and docketed.
On January 16, 1940, the sheriff levied upon defendant's homestead under an execution issued out of the district court. On April 1, 1940, defendant filed a voluntary petition in bankruptcy. On March 17, 1941, she obtained her discharge.
On August 12, 1941, defendant moved to set aside and discharge the levy upon her property under the execution. At the hearing, one of plaintiffs' attorneys filed an affidavit showing all the facts relating to the furnishing of the material and the performance of the work and that the same was for the construction, repair, and improvement of defendant's homestead. The court denied defendant's motion, and she appeals.
Plaintiffs contend that the judgment as shown by the record thereof and the extrinsic evidence received on the hearing of the motion is one for a debt for work done and material furnished for the construction, repair, and improvement of defendant's homestead; that it is a lien thereon; and that the lien was not affected by defendant's discharge in bankruptcy. Defendant contends that the judgment is an ordinary one for the recovery of money; that it is not a lien on her homestead; and that it was discharged by *112 her discharge in bankruptcy. As subsidiary propositions in sup. port of her contentions, she urges that plaintiffs were entitled to recover a judgment in the municipal court only for the amount of money demanded; that the municipal court was without jurisdiction to grant the amendment in question and to find and adjudicate that the debt was for work done and material furnished in the construction, repair, and improvement of her homestead; and that extrinsic evidence was not admissible at the hearing of the motion to show such facts.
1. A judgment of the municipal court of St. Paul for the recovery of money becomes a lien upon the judgment debtor's real estate by filing a transcript thereof with the clerk of the district court of Ramsey county. Sp. L. 1889, c. 351, § 44, provides that no judgment of the municipal court of St. Paul shall be a lien upon real estate until a transcript thereof is filed in the district court of Ramsey county; that it is the duty of the clerk of the district court to file and docket any judgment of which a transcript is so filed; and that "every such judgment shall become a lien upon the real estate of the debtor, from the time of filing such transcript, to the same extent as a judgment of said district court, and shall thereafter, so far as relates to the enforcement of the same, be exclusively under the control of said district court, and carried into execution by its process the same as if rendered in said district court." In Clark v. Butts,
2. The fact that the real estate was defendant's homestead did not prevent the lien from attaching. Minn. Const. art.
3. That the municipal court judgment and the transcript thereof filed in the district court show that the judgment was for work done and material furnished in the construction, repair, and improvement of defendant's homestead appears on the face of the record as well as by the evidence aliunde.
In a judgment by default plaintiff's relief is strictly limited in nature and degree to that specifically demanded in the complaint, and it makes no difference that other and greater relief might be justified by the allegations and proofs. Sache v. Wallace,
That the deepening of the well was for the construction, repair, or improvement of the homestead follows as a conclusion of law.
Extrinsic evidence is admissible to show that the homestead is subject to the payment of a particular claim. Gregory Co. v. Cale,
4. The lien of a judgment is not affected by a discharge in bankruptcy. The personal liability of the judgment debtor is discharged, but the lien remains; and, where, as here, the judgment is a lien upon the debtor's homestead, it may be enforced by execution against the homestead the same as other property. Nadeau *115
v. Ball,
The order should be affirmed.
Affirmed.