12 Kan. 340 | Kan. | 1873
The opinion of the court was delivered by
This was a proceeding in the district court of Johnson county, by the defendants in error, A. McDonald & Bro., under § 568 of the civil code, to vacate a certain judgment previously rendered in said court in favor of Laithe, plaintiff in error, and against said McDonald & Bro. for the sum of $5,686, and costs, and for a new trial. The petition for the vacating of said judgment, and for the new trial, is founded principally if not .entirely upon the fourth subdivison of said section, to-wit, “for fraud practiced by the successful party in obtaining the judgment;” although there are some allegations in said petition which would tend also to bring the proceeding under the seventh subdivision of said section, to-wit, “ for unavoidable casualty or misfortune preventing the party from prosecuting or defending.” The fraud alleged to have been “practiced by the successful party in obtaining the judgment,” was the willful and corrupt perjury of the plaintiff in error himself on the trial, as the sole witness in the case, and in the absence of the other parties and their counsel. The petition in this proceeding alleges, among other things, substantially as follows: In 1868 said Laithe brought an action against McDonald '& Bro. in the district court of Johnson county for a faihrre by them to deliver goods which, as he charged, were received by them as common carriers, and lost by their negligence. McDonald & Bro. answered by a general denial of the facts stated in the petition. The cause was tried at the October Term 1868 of the district court, on said petition and answer. The defendants were not present at the trial. The plaintiff, Laithe, was
We have examined all the American authorities referred to by counsel for plaintiff in error, and we do not think that any one of them militates against the views we have expressed in this opinion. The leading case referred to by counsel for plaintiff is Smith v. Lowry, 1 Johns. Ch., 320. That was an action to vacate a judgment, not because the judgment had been obtained through fraud, but because excessive damages had been obtained through fraud. The Chancellor says in his opinion: “The cases of relief in equity against judgments at law, founded in fraud, are, when the fraud goes to the whole judgment, and not to the mere excess of damages in a case properly sounding in damages.” The next strong case of the plaintiff is Foster v. Wood, 6 Johns. Ch., 87. In this case the plaintiff took-judgment for $317.44, which was $76.00 too much; but it is not alleged that there was any fraud or perjury in taking such judgment. The next case upon which the plaintiff seems to rely is Floyd v. Jayne, 6 Johns. Ch., 479. There was no perjury in this case. The defendant claimed that he had paid the demand upon which this judgment was rendered, before the suit was brought, but with gross negligence he went to trial without even pleading payment. He of course knew beforehand that the judgment must go against him unless he were to plead and prove the payment, for the action was on an ordinary promissory note. The case of Riddle v. Baker, 13 Cal., 295, was a bill in equity to restrain
.We think that McDonald & Bro. have clearly shown a right to the relief they ask under the statute, and therefore the judgment of the court below must be affirmed.