152 Ind. 434 | Ind. | 1899
The appellant brought suit against the appellees to enjoin them from removing a frame dwelling house from certain lots in the city of Plymouth, purchased by appellant at a judicial sale, and claimed by him under a certificate of purchase. The complaint was in four para
The material parts of the fourth paragraph are as follows: On the 23rd day of March, 1895, one Philip Heyde was, and ever since has been, the owner of lots numbered seventy-nine (79) and eighty-three (83) in Corbin’s addition, etc., to the city of Plymouth, in Marshall county, Indiana; that on said day said Heyde executed and delivered to one Corbin a mortgage for the purchase money of said lots, and that afterwards, Corbin sold and transferred said mortgage to appellant; that Heyde had erected a dwelling house of the value of $300 on these lots, which was at the time of the purchase of said mortgage a part of the ^hid real estate; that afterwards, on the 17th day of April, 1897, in a foreclosure proceeding brought by the appellees, a judgment was rendered giving to the appellees the right to remove the dwelling house so erected by said Heyde, within ninety days after a sale thereof by the sheriff, as lands are sold on execution; that appellant was a party defendant to the said suit, and that after the rendition of the judgment, but within the time prescribed by law, he filed his motion for a new trial of said cause, and that the said motion has not been ruled upon, or otherwise disposed of, in said court, but is yet pending therein; that after the rendition of the judgment aforesaid, and while appellant’s motion for a new trial was still pending, appellees caused an order of sale to be issued upon said judgment, and that on the 6th day of September, 1897, at a sale by the sheriff of said Marshall county, by virtue of said judgment and order of sale, the said frame dwelling house was bid off by appellees, and is claimed by them as such purchasers; that neither of said appellees has any claim against said real estate or said dwelling house, or. any interest therein, except such claim and interest as were derived through said sheriff’s sale; that appellees are threatening to, and, unless restrained and enjoined by the court, will remove said frame dwelling
In addition to the facts stated in the foregoing paragraph of complaint, it is admitted in the brief filed by appellant that the appellees furnished the materials used by Iieyde in the construction of the said dwelling house, and that the action referred to in the foregoing paragraph was a suit brought by appellees to enforce their lien against said dwelling house for the materials so furnished.
Appellees file their motion to dismiss this appeal upon the ground that appellant has no such interest in the controversy as entitles him to an appeal, and this motion is supported by affidavit. The facts relied upon to sustain the motion are that the appellant, before bringing this suit in the court below, had bid in the undivided two-thirds of lots numbers seventy-nine and eighty-three for the full amount of his judgment; that he had received a certificate of purchase therefor, and that the order of sale as to him had been returned fully satisfied.
Whatever weight these facts might have by way of a defense to the suit brought by appellant for an injunction, it is clear that they furnish no ground for the dismissal of this appeal. It is sufficient to say that the appellant brought
We proceed now to the examination of the sufficiency of the fourth paragraph of the complaint.
The question for decision is, can an execution or order of sale be issued and enforced, pursuant to a judgment, while a motion for a new trial, filed after the rendition of the judgment, but within the time allowed by the statute, is pending and undisposed of?
At common law a motion for a new trial was required to be made within four days, exclusive, after the entry of a rule for judgment; and, if not made within that time, the party complaining could not afterwards be heard on the subject of a new trial. Tidd’s Pr. 820. Blacks. Com. Book IIÍ, 387-397.
By statute adopted in this State in 1852, section 354 R. S. 1852, p. ll"9, and'reenacted and continued in force September 19, 1881, it is provided that the application for a new trial may be made at any time during the term at which the verdict or decision is rendered. Section 570 Burns 1894.
A construction was given to this statute in Beals v. Beals, 20 Ind. 163, where it was held that the motion for a new trial might be made even after judgment. This ruling has been followed in several cases. Hinkle v. Margerum, 50 Ind. 240; Cox, Adm., v. Baker, 113 Ind. 62; Colchen v. Ninde, 120 Ind. 88.
In regard to the enforcement of judgments, the statute provides that any party in whose favor judgment has been rendered may at any time wdthin ten years after the entry thereof proceed to enforce the same. Section 686 Burns 1894.
An execution may be issued upon a judgment as soon as the record in the case is read in open court and signed by the
While the statute authorizes the filing of a motion for a new trial after the entry of judgment, it does not provide for any stay of execution upon the judgment as a consequence of such proceeding. It cannot be maintained that the mere filing of the motion has that effect. We can perceive no reason why it should. If a party to an action fails or neglects to file a motion for a new trial before judgment, he must take the consequences of such delay. Under a similar statute, the supreme court of Illinois held, in Parr v. Van Horne, 40 Ill. 122, that a motion for a new trial made after judgment would not operate in any way to suspend the judgment, or impair its force or conclusiveness.
The views here expressed are not inconsistent with the decisions of this court in New York, etc., R. Co. v. Doane, 105 Ind. 92, and Colchen v. Ninde, 120 Ind. 88. While a motion for a new trial is undisposed of, 'there can be no final judgment within the meaning of the statute regulating appeals. But, for all purposes other than the right of appeal, the judgment, as soon as entered, read, and signed in open court, is final, and may be enforced by appropriate writ according to its terms.
When it is said in the books that at common law a motion for a new trial suspends the judgment and its effects until the motion is disposed of, the filing of a motion before judgment is referred to. When the motion is filed before judgment, the rendition and entry of the judgment are thereby suspended. It is not said that' such a motion after judgment operates to stay execution. The judgment is affirmed.