9 S.D. 364 | S.D. | 1896
This was an action to recover the value of a stock of drugs, etc., alleged to have been converted by the defendant and appellant. The appellant justified the seizure under and by virtue of a judgment and execution in the case of Noyes Bros. & Cutler against B. L. Havdahl. The plaintiff claimed the right to the possession of the stock of drugs under and by virtue of a chattel mortgage executed by said Havdahl to one N. J. Deisher, trustee, and by him transferred to the plaintiff, as was alleged by the plaintiff.
The important -question in the case arises on the ruling of the court in excluding the judgment and, execution in the action of Noyes Bros. & Cutler against Havdahl, under which the .appellant, as sheriff of Minnehaha county, sought to justify his seizure of the property in controversy. H. B. Carleton, a witness on the part of the defendant, testified that he was the clerk of the circuit and county court in and for Minnehaha county, and on cross-examination he testified that “the judgment was entered on page 303 of the record book on the day it was filed, November 20th, some time during that day. It was not entered in the judgment book at the time the execution was issued.” The defendant then offered the judgment roll and execution in evidence, to which the counsel for plaintiff objected, and the same were excluded, and defendant excepted. The grounds'of the plaintiff’s objection are not stated in the abstract, but both parties have argued the case in this court, upon the theory that the objection was made upon the ground that it appeared from the evidence of Carleton, given without objection, that no judgment had been entered in the judgment book at the time the execution issued, and-that the judgment and execution were .evidently excluded upon that ground by the trig! .court, Th.e
It is contended by the learned counsel for tho appellant that the judgment, when reduced to writing, and signed by the judge, was the final determination of the action, and execution issued thereon was a valid execution, though no judgment had been, in fact, entered in the judgment book, and that the court, therefore, erred in excluding the judgment roll and execution. The learned counsel for the respondent contends that the paper signed by the judge was, in legal effect, simply an order for judgment, and that there can be in this state no legal judgment until one is entered in the judgment book, which will authorize the issuance of an execution, the filing of a judgment roll, or the docketing of the judgment. This is an important question in this state, and has never yet been passed upon by the appellate court. A judgment is defined by Sec. 5024, Comp. Laws, as follows: “A judgment is the final determination of the rights of the parties in the action.” It will be observed that what'constitutes the evidence of such judgment, or when or how such determination of the rights of the parties shall become effectual as a judgment, is left unprovided for by that section. It defines a judgment in the language of most of the text-books upon this subject. Section 5095 provides that “judgment upon an issue of law or fact * * * may be entered by the clerk upon the order of the court or the judge thereof.” Section 5101 provides that ‘ ‘the clerk shall keep, among the records of the court, a book, for the entry of the judgments, to be called the ‘judgment book’ ” Section 5102 provides: “The judgment shall be entered in the judgment book, and shall specify clearly the relief granted or other determination of the
The counsel for the appellant have cited a large number of authorities, including both text writers and courts, in support of their contention that the judgment prepared and signed by the judge is the judgment of the court; but the statutory provisions on this subject are so various that these decisions throw but little light 'upon the question, under .the peculiar
It is further contended that such a holding has the effect of giving authority to the clerk, and not the court, to enter the judgment. But this is not so, for the reason that, in contemplation of law the court enters the judgment in the judgment book, through its clerk, who merely performs the clerical act of writing the judgment in the judgment book, under the direction of the court.
It' is further contended by appellant that the practice in this state has been to regard the judgment, signed by the court and filed, as the judgment in the case, and 'that a decision at this time will unsettle titles to property sold upon execution. While a court, in making its decision, cannot look to consequences beyond the case before it, we apprehend no such result as counsel suggest would follow, for the reason that evidence aliunde the record could not properly be admitted in a collateral proceeding, if objected to on the trial, and the presumption that the clerk had performed his duty would prevail, unless otherwise clearly shown by the record. In the execution issued in this case, the clerk recites that ‘ ‘whereas, on the 19th day of November, 1895, * '* * plaintiffs recovered a judgment in the circuit court,” etc.; “and whereas, the judgment roll * * * was filed in the office of the clerk * * * on the 20th day of November, 1895, and the said judgment was docketed * * * on the 20th day of November, 1895.” As no judgment can be said to be recovered until it is properly en
At the conclusion of all the evidence, the plaintiff requested the court to direct a verdict for the full amount appearing to be due upon the note, upon the following grounds: “(1) That the undisputed evidence shows the value of the property converted to be four hundred and fifty nine dollars and fifty cents. (2) That no justification or mitigating circumstances were shown by the defendant, and the amount of the property converted confessedly is in excess of the amount claimed by the plaintiff.” The defendant also moved the court to direct a verdict for the defendant upon the following grounds: “(1) Because the mortgage was void as to the creditors of the mortgagor, because he was allowed to deal with the property for his own use, by selling and converting the proceeds of sale to his own use, and not accounting for them upon the mortgage, which fact was known to the holders of the mortgage, both before the payment to the bank and subsequent. (2) If it was fraudulent in part by allowing the mortgagor to sell goods in the ordinary course of business, and appropriate to his own use the proceeds of sale, it was thereby wrong, fraudulent and void as to his creditors, as to all the property covered by the mortgage. (3) The debt for which the note and mortgage -were given as collateral security was fully paid and discharged, and thereby the note and mortgage became extinguished, and could not afterwards be revived by any subse
The defendant’s motion was denied, and the motion of the plaintiff granted, to all of which the defendant duly excepted. The court thereupon charged the jury as follows: “Gentlemen of the jury, the direction which I give you is that you will find this note was given originally for the sum of three hundred and twenty dollars. Upon this note is an endorsement of one hundred and ten doliars. You will compute the interest on this note according to the methods of computing interest, deduct the payment, and bring in a verdict for that amount, with interest, if you find the plaintiff is entitled to interest. And, if you find that he is entitled to anything for special damages— that is, his time for the three hours he was employed in mak
Without stopping to discuss the legal propositions contained in defendant’s motion at length, it will be sufficient to say that, as the case stood, the defendant was not in a position to avail himself of the first two propositions, as without an execution he could not attack the plaintiff’s mortgage. The third, fourth, fifth, sixth, seventh and eighth grounds will be considered generally in connection with the plaintiff’s motion for the direction of a verdict.
The property when taken by the defendant, was not in plaintiff’s possession. He cannot be heard to question defendant’s right to it, unless he had a lien thereon. He did not have a lien if the debt for which the mortgage was given as security was paid. This is made clear by Section 4333, Comp. Laws, which reads as follows: “The existence of a lien upon property does not of itself entitle the person in whose favor it exists to a lien upon the same property for the performance of any other obligation than that which the lien originally secured.” And Section 4341 provides: “A lien is to be deemed accessory to the act for the performance of which it is a security, whether any person is bound for such performance, or not, and is extinguishable in like manner with any other accessory obligation.” This question of fact therefore arose: Did the giving of the check by plaintiff, and the subsequent delivery of the note to him, constitute a payment or an assignment? If an assignment, the lien continued for the amount actually paid by him; if payment, then the lien was extinguished, and defendant should have had a verdict. It appears from the evidence thatHavdahl had'resided inGarretson for many years, engaged in the drug business, and that the plaintiff -was a practicing physician in that town, and occasionally, in the absence of Havdahl, attended to customers. Havdahl became indebted to the bank at Garretson on two notes, amounting to $319.85; and, to secure the payment of the same, he executed a note and chattel