10 S.D. 566 | S.D. | 1898
This appeal is from an order made in circuit court, overruling a motion to vacate and set aside, as to defendant Emily Southard, an alleged default judgment entered in territorial district court on the 3d day of February, 1885. The facts fairly -before us, and essential to a proper understanding of the case, so far as undisputed, are substantially as follows: Being the owner of a city lot, appellant, Southard, entered into a contract of sale or bond for a deed with Isabella
Immediately prior to entry of the foregoing judgment, the following affidavit of default was made and filed as a record in the case: “Frank K,. Aikens, being duly sworn, says he is attorney for plaintiff in the above entitled action; that the summons and notice of the object of the action was served on the defendants Emily Southard and St. Croix Lumber Company on the 17th and 15th days of November, 1883; and that no answer, appearance, or demurrer has been by them, or either of them, served in the above entitled action.” Note of issue and notice of trial were addressed to, and service thereof was admitted by, “J. W. Taylor, Attorney for Defendant Smith.” Later, the following writing was executed, and became a part of the record: “Notice of motion for making the foregoing order confirming the sheriff’s report of sale is hereby waived, and I consent that the same shall be confirmed as set forth in the above order. Canton, D. T., March 31st, 1884. J. W. Taylor, Attorney for the Defendant Isabella M. Smith. ” In the affidavit upon which this motion, made March 31, 1897, was predicated, appellant swears that she never appeared in the action by attorney or otherwise, and never employed or authorized any one to so appear; “that no notice of the rendition or entry of said judgment, or of said sale, or of the application for an order confirming the same, or otherwise, has .ever been given or served upon affiant, and that the affiant had no knowledge that a judgment purporting to adjudge her rights in said premises inferior to that of said plaintiffs had ever been rendered, or that any judgment granting to plaintiff any greater relief than that demanded in the complaint, or than the relief as stated in the notice of no personal claim, had been ever rendered or entered, nor has this affiant had any notice or knowledge that said sale was ever made purporting to convey her interest until the date of this affidavit.” This affidavit was
The case to which affiant Judd refers (Southard v. Smith, 8 S. D. 230, 66 N. W. 316) was considered on appeal, as tried in the court below, upon the theory that appellant, Emily Southard, appeared and answered in this action and upon the record presented. This court held that she was concluded by failure to deny the allegation of the complaint “that the defendant Emily Southard, plaintiffs are informed and believe, has or claims some interest in the land upon which said building stands, but she has no claim prior to that of plaintiff.” Such an allegation has been held to be sufficient notice of a paramount claim in a foreclosure proceeding, and that the status of a defendant' with reference to the property involved would be litigated, and, upon failure to answer, he may be, by the decree, forever estopped from asserting any superior right to, interest in, or lien upon, said property. Wolfinger v. Betz., 66 Iowa 594, 24 N. W. 228. Although there is nothing in the record to indicate whether the trial court concluded that appellant had in fact answered, or whether the order complained of was suggested by the view that the judgment, though by default, is not void, but merely irregular, and that appellant’s long acquiescence is inexcusable, we are of the opinion that the order appealed from is sustainable upon either ground. The latest adjudication of the New York court upon the following state of facts, under a statute like ours, is an authority in point: “The prayer of the complaint was that the defendant Luke Clark and all persons claiming under him subsequent to
The hardships likely to result from the indiscriminate exercise of the power to vacate an erroneous judgment, on motion and due consideration, for the security of a title that has for many years rested undisturbed on a judicial proceeding, suggests a court of equity as a proper forum to which, if appellant has a remedy, application for relief should be made; and the court very wisely denied the motion. By the service of the summons and the filing of a complaint, good as against appellant, on demurrer the court acquired jurisdiction to hear and determine the cáse according to the law and facts; and its decree,- though erroneous in so far as it exceeded the prayer for relief, ought not, upon motion, to be vacated at this late day, under the circumstances presented, and without notice to innocent intervening purchasers of the property, whose title would thus be devested without a day in court. The order appealed from is affirmed.