Plаintiff brought this contract action which was settled before trial. As part of the settlement a default judgment was entered against the defendant McVeety Machinery Company (of Oregon). After the default judgment had been entered defendants’ counsel recalled that McVeety Machinery Company had filed a bond dischаrging an attachment made by the plaintiff in *99 the action. The parties to the bond would be required to pay the amount of the bond in satisfaction of the judgment. For this rеason the defendant company moved to set aside the default judgment upon the ground that it had been entered by mistake. The trial court set aside the judgment аnd the plaintiff appeals.
Defendants contend the order setting aside the default was not a final order and, therefore, not an appealable order. The plaintiff counters by asserting that the trial court was not authorized by statute to set aside the default judgment; that because the trial court lacked statutory authority it had no “jurisdiction” to act; and that orders made without jurisdiction are appealable.
A review of our decisions reveals that clarificаtion of this point is necessary.
An order setting aside a judgment is ordinarily not final and, therefore, not appealable.
Walker v. Clyde,
This court, however, dеveloped an exception to this rule. In
Deering v. Quivey,
It is apparent that the circumstances in
Trullenger v. Todd,
supra (
While the principle stated by
Deering v. Quivey,
supra (
“In the case at bar the court had jurisdiction of the parties and of the subject matter. It has been *101 frequently held that, if the court has jurisdiction of the parties and of the subject matter, the order is not void, although it may be erroneous: * *80 Or at 506 .
Walker v. Clyde,
supra (
“Wе think that the case now under consideration comes within the statute, and that the order, whether rightly or wrongly made, is not appeal-able. The motion to dismiss is, therеfore, allowed.”206 Or at 327 .
If the principle of
Deering v. Quivey,
supra (
We are of the opinion that
Deering v. Quivey,
supra (
Despite this pronouncement plaintiff’s appeal is not dismissed. Because of the contradictions in our priоr decisions the appealability of the order in this case was uncertain. The substantive issue in this ease has been briefed and orally argued; therefore, wе will decide the substantive issue. We give prospective effect, only, to the rule that an order setting aside a default judgment is not appealable.
Smith v. Cooper,
*102 Plaintiff contends that because the judgment was entered as part of an agreement of the parties the trial-court erred in setting it aside. The evidence is that the parties, through their counsel, agreed that a judgment would be entered against the defendant John McVeety for $300; that defendant’s counsel would withdraw as counsel for McVeety Machinery Company (of Oregon); that McVeety Machinery Company’s answer would be stricken; and that plaintiff would be free to take a default judgment against McVeety Machinery Company. Plaintiff took the judgment. Apparently, plaintiff started to collect the judgment from the surety on the release of attachment bond and defendants’ counsel learned that John McVeety was personally liable to the surety. Defendants’ counsel moved tо set aside the default judgment. Interpreting the evidence most favorably to defendants, counsel’s mistake was that he did not recall the existence of the bond at the time his clients agreed to and he approved the settlement.
Recently, we announced the general rule on this issue to be:
“ * * [T]hat an order, judgment, оr decree, entered by the court upon the consent of the parties litigant, being in the nature of a contract to which the court has given its formal aрproval, cannot subsequently be opened, changed, or set aside without the assent of the parties, in the absence of fraud, mutual mistake, or actuаl absence of consent, and then only by an appropriate legal proceeding.’ ” Westfall v. Wilson,255 Or 428 , 431,467 P2d 966 (1970).
The entry of the default judgment is, in effect, part performanсe of the contract. Moving to set aside the default is an attempt to rescind the contract. Com *103 tracts, including contracts in which, a part of the performance is entry of a judgment, can only be rescinded for certain limited reasons. As the above quotation states, fraud and mutual mistake are two grounds for rеscission or vacating a judgment entered by consent. Neither are present here.
Viewing the evidence in the light most favorable to the defendants, we find that there was merely a unilateral mistake by defendants’ counsel. In order for a unilateral mistake by one party to a contract to be a ground for rescission the mistake must actually or constructively be known to the other party to the contract.
G. E. Supply Corp. v. Republic Cons. Corp.,
OES 18.160 prоvides that the trial court can relieve a party from a judgment entered into through “mistake” or “excusable neglect.” This statute does not permit the trial court to relieve a party from a judgment entered into as a result of an agreed settlement which was entered into because of mistake of one party as to the effect of the judgment.
Stites v. McGee,
supra (
Reversed.
Notes
“The court may, in its discretion, and upon such terms as may be just, at any time within one year after notice thereof, relieve а party from a judgment,.decree, order or other proceeding taken against him through his mistake, inadvertence, surprise or excusable neglect.”
Stites v. McGee,
