168 P. 11 | Idaho | 1917
Eugene W. Yeomans and Kirtland I. Perky instituted an action against Charles H. Lamberton,
An order was made by the defendant herein, Hon. Chas. P. McCarthy, as district judge, dissolving the partnership and ordering an accounting. Thereafter a receiver was appointed and the accounting was had, the case tried and the court filed its findings of fact and conclusions of law and a judgment wherein it was decreed, in substance, that Yeomans recover from Lamberton $10,729.65; that Perky recover from him $10,066.39, and that execution issue therefor; that the partnership be dissolved, the receiver continue, until final order of the court, to administer the partnership assets and pay the debts and cost of administration; that the interest of Lamberton, in the remaining property, or so much thereof as may be necessary for that purpose, be sold to pay the amounts found due to plaintiffs, and that any remaining property be divided, one-fourth to Yeomans, one-fourth to
The plaintiff herein has petitioned this court to issue a writ of mandate requiring the defendant to render a final judgment in that action, contending that the decree heretofore made and entered is interlocutory, not final, and therefore not appealable; also that it is void because personal judgment was rendered against him before the partnership assets had been sold and the proceeds distributed among the parties as their interests might appear and an execution was directed to issue thereon; that it is void for ambiguity because it orders that execution shall issue, and yet directs the amounts found due to the plaintiffs to be paid from the sale of the partnership assets in the hands of the receiver; that it specifies that the remainder of the property be divided between the parties, but does not direct who shall make the division; that it does not identify the property to be sold or the debts to be paid; that the court reserves jurisdiction to make further orders controlling the actions of the receiver.
Where a judge refuses to render a final judgment after a case has been finally submitted for adjudication, mandate will lie (Havens v. Stewart, 7 Ida. 298, 62 Pac. 682), but it is well settled in this state that such a writ will not issue to compel the court to enter a certain kind of judgment, nor in any case where there is a plain, speedy and adequate remedy at law. (St. Michael’s Monastery v. Steele, ante, p. 609, 167 Pac. 349, and cases therein cited.)
Is the judgment herein complained of final ? Without passing upon the question of whether or not, in an action for a dissolution of partnership and an accounting, the court may render a personal judgment against any of the parties and direct an execution therefor, it is sufficient to say that if such a judgment is erroneous, an appeal therefrom can be taken. The personal feature of the judgment does not render void that part of it which determines the amount dtie plaintiffs,
Without passing upon the question as to whether the judgment is void, we will say that different remedies are upheld by different authorities to relieve from a void judgment, among which are an appeal, motion to vacate, and appropriate action to prohibit its execution (3 C. J. 467), but our attention has been directed to no authority, and we can find none, holding that the invalidity of such a judgment furnishes a basis for relief by mandamus. Indeed, the existence of any one of the various remedies approved by the courts defeats plaintiff’s right to the writ prayed for in this case. (St. Michael’s Monastery v. Steele, supra.) Nor can the finality of the judgment be attacked because the court reserved jurisdiction to change or modify the directions given to the receiver. By so doing it does not leave undecided any question involving a substantial right of any of the parties, but, having determined those rights, it directs the mere ministerial execution of such judgment and reserves the power to supervise such execution. (Zappettini v. Buckles, 167 Cal. 27, 138 Pac. 696; Costello v. Scott, 30 Nev. 43, 93 Pac. 1, 94 Pac. 222.)
In an action for dissolution of a partnership and for an accounting, a determination of the character and identity of the property to be disposed of and of any indebtedness to be paid is necessary, and if the judgment fails to sufficiently describe the property placed in the hands of the receiver to be sold, or the debts to be paid, an appeal will lie to this court as in any other case where the trial court has failed to render findings and to adjudicate a material issue.
The omission to designate who shall divide the remaining property among the parties, and the manner of its division, was not a failure to determine the substantial rights of the litigants, but merely a defect in the mode of execution, and does not affect the finality of the judgment so as to render it nonappealable.
A final judgment has been stated to be one which disposes of the subject matter of the controversy or determines the litigation between the parties on its merits. (3 C. J. 441.)
Plaintiff has cited many authorities to sustain his contention that the judgment complained of is not final, for the reason that the court reserved the right to direct the future action of the receiver, but in the authorities cited the acts remaining to be done by the court did not relate to the mere execution of the judgment, but were necessary to the final determination of the substantial rights of the litigants. The authorities are therefore not in point.
The petition for writ of mandate is denied. Costs are awarded to defendant.