197 P. 1023 | Idaho | 1921
This action was commenced by Lee Charles Miller against a large number of defendants to obtain an adjudication of his right to the use of water flowing in Porter Creek, in Boise county. Judgment was entered, in which the priority of Miller’s right was decreed and the defendants were enjoined from interference therewith. The decree also contained a paragraph adjudicating the priority of defendants George H. Faull and wife, and enjoining their codefendants from interfering with the right so decreed. Certain of the defendants in the action, who were eodefendants with George H. Faull and wife, filed a motion to vacate and set aside the judgment on the ground of mistake, inadvertence, surprise and excusable neglect under C. S., sec. 6726. The motion also requested the court to open the judgment “and relieve said defendants and each of them from that portion of said judgment granting affirmative relief against them, and each of them, in favor of defendants George H. Faull and Mary A. Faull, his wife.” One of the grounds of the motion was that the court was without jurisdiction to decree affirmative relief granted in said judgment in favor of the defendants Faull, and that the part of the judgment granting affirmative relief to them is null and void. The court denied the motion to vacate the judgment. The order, however, contained the following:
“It is further ordered that that part of said judgment which is in favor of the defendants George H. Faull and Mary A. Faull, his wife, and against the above-named defendants and movants be and the same is hereby vacated and set aside,- that is to say, it is hereby ordered that that specific part of said judgment which provides that the water rights of defendants George H. Faull and Mary A. Faull for 1.6 cubic feet per second, being the equivalent of 80 inches of the waters of Porter Creek, Boise county, Idaho, is the second priority from said creek, as against each
Defendants George H. Faull and wife have appealed from the order.
It is urged by respondents that the portion of the judgment vacated by. the court was void. They set forth in affidavits that the defendants in the action, including Faull and wife, previous to the trial had entered into an understanding and agreement that “the right asserted by the plaintiff in such action would, if established, work a common injury against all of the said defendants, and that it would be to the best interests of all the defendants not to compel an adjudication of the rights of the defendants as among themselves; that it was further agreed by and among the parties to said agreement that the judgment entered in said action should determine the validity of plaintiff’s claim, but that it should not have the effect of binding or in anywise prejudicing the rights of said defendants or any of them among themselves with regard to any issue, matter or thing involved in said action.....That it was pursuant to said understanding or agreement that the answers and erossieomplaints filed by said defendants were not served upon any parties to the action, other than the plaintiff, Lee Charles Miller, and that as a result thereof no issue was ever joined as between the said defendants or any of them.....”
Appellant George H. Faull by affidavit denied that he had entered into such agreement or authorized his attorney to do so.
It is doubtful whether this stipulation, standing alone, would amount to a waiver of service and a general appearance in view of our statute. (C. S., sec. 7202; Washington etc. Land Co. v. Weiser Nat. Bank, 26 Ida. 717, 116 Pac. 116.) The record discloses, however, that upon the. trial respondents consented to the 'introduction of certain exhibits on the part of appellants Faull and wife, and also cross-examined Mr. Faull when a witness on his own behalf. We think that participation in the trial of a cause of action by examining and cross-examining witnesses therein amounts to a general appearance and is a waiver of service of process or of a cross-complaint. (1 C. J. 1333, sec. 27; Sheldon v. Landwehr, 159 Cal. 778, 116 Pac. 44; Schafer v. Moe, 72 Ill. App. 50. See, also, Shaw v. Martin, 20 Ida. 168, 117 Pac. 853.)
The cross-complaint of appellants Faull and wife alleges that appellants are the owners of certain lands which are arid in character. It then sets out the inception and perfection of a water right by one D. B. Mooney which appellants subsequently acquired. It also sets out their hi aim to an additional water right initiated by themselves, and they claim, under their appropriations aforesaid, the prior and first right to the use of 210 inches of the waters of Porter Creek, except 50 inches of water therefrom, measured under a four-inch pressure, to the use of which they admit the plaintiff had a prior right.
A judgment must rést upon sufficient pleadings. It is true that under C. S., sec. 6707, the allegations of the pleadings must be liberally construed with a view to substantial justice between the parties. (McCormick v. Smith, 23 Ida. 487, 130 Pac. 999.) Every reasonable intendment is indulged in favor of the sufficiency of the complaint, and all inferences of fact which may be drawn from the facts alleged must be deemed ‘within reasonable limits to be alleged, unless it is specially attacked by demurrer or motion. (Mode v. Myers, 30 Ida. 159, 164 Pac. 91; Newport Water Co. v. Kellogg, 31 Ida. 574, 174 Pac. 602.) These cases, however, do not go so far as to hold that a judgment may be sustained when there is an entire lack of essential allegations to support it. “In addition to the jurisdiction of the parties and subject matter, it is necessary to the validity of a judgment that the court have jurisdiction of the question which the judgment assumes to decide, or the particular remedy or relief which it assumes to grant.” (Gile v. Wood, 32 Ida. 752, 188 Pac. 36.) In that case it was held that it was beyond the jurisdiction of the court to order a deficiency judgment in an action for the foreclosure of a mortgage against a party, in the absence of an allegation in the complaint to the effect that the party was indebted to the plaintiff. “Neither can it [a court] go beyond the issues and pass upon a matter which the parties neither submitted nor intended to submit - for its determination.” (Black on Judgments, 2d ed., see. 215, p. 323; Munday v. Vail, 34
A judgment void upon its face may be set aside upon motion of a party or upon tbe court’s own motion at any time, and the court may also strike from the judgment and vacate any portion thereof which is void. (Gile v. Wood, supra; Nixon v. Tongren, ante, p. 287, 193 Pac. 731.)
Difficulty may arise in determining whether a judgment is void upon its face because it grants relief beyond the scope of the allegations of the complaint. (See Reynolds v. Stockton, 140 U. S. 254, 11 Sup. Ct. 773, 35 L. ed. 464, see, also, Rose’s U. S. Notes.) In that case it is said:
“A judgment to be conclusive upon the parties to the litigation must be responsive to the matters controverted. Nor are we concerned with the question as to the rule which obtains in a case in which, while the matter determined was not, in fact, put in issue by the pleadings, it is apparent from the record that the defeated party was present at the trial, and actually litigated that matter. In such a case the proposition so often affirmed, that that is to be considered as done which ought to have been done, may have weight, and the amendment which ought to have been made to conform the pleadings to the evidence may be treated as having been made. Here there was no appearance after the filing of the answer and no participation in the trial or other proceedings. Whatever may be the rule where substantial amendments to the complaint are permitted and made, and the defendant responds thereto, or where it appears that he tabes actual part in the litigation of the matters determined, the rule is universal that, where he appears and responds only to the complaint as filed, and no amendment is made thereto, the judgment is conclusive only so far as it determines matters which, by the pleadings, are put in issue.”
In the affidavits submitted in support of the motion, it is stated that no evidence was introduced by the defendants or any of them seeking to establish any right of action against any party or parties to said action other than the plaintiff; that on the oral argument attention of the district court was called to the state of the pleadings, and the- fact that no issue had been joined as between any of the defendants. The motion was based in part upon the entire record of the trial, and the court certified that this record was considered by him in passing upon the motion.
A careful consideration of the affidavits, in connection with the record on the trial, leads to the conclusion that the trial of the cause of action set forth in appellants’ cross-complaint was limited to the issues tendered thereby, and that the judgment in appellants’ favor was not responsive to their cross-complaint or to any issue raised and determined in the action.
The order of the court is affirmed. Costs awarded to respondents.