delivered tbe opinion.
The facts of tbe case so far as they have any important bearing upon tbe question under consideration, are as follows: On tbe eighth day of January, 1872, one O. W. Peterson and wife, who were then the owners of tbe property, executed to James Griffin a mortgage upon tbe undivided one half of lots 5, 6, and 10 in block 2, in Boise city, and certain personal property, to secure the payment of a promissory note given by Peterson to Griffin for tbe sum of three thousand dollars in gold. Upon default of
It further appears that in pursuance of such decree the sheriff offered the property for sale at public auction on the thirty-first day of May, 1873, that the appellant bid for the undivided half of lots 5 and 6 in block 2, the sum of two thousand seven hundred and twenty-five dollars in gold coin, and for the undivided half of lot 10, the sum of one hundred dollars in gold coin, and for the personal property, the sum of seven hundred dollars in gold coin, making in the aggregate the sum of three thousand five hundred and twenty-five dollars, for which sum the whole of said property was struck off to him, and that on the same day, the sheriff executed to him a deed for the real estate so sold. It also appears that the appellant obtained a judgment in the Boise county district court against the said O. W. Peterson on the third day of August, 1872, for the sum of six thousand three hundred and twenty-three dollars and ninety cents, and on the fifth day of the same month, filed a transcript thereof in the recorder’s office of Ada county, and that the same was recorded in the books of the office, but by a mistake of the recorder the judgment was recorded as against D. W. Peterson instead of O. W. Peterson.
Prom this judgment Peterson took an appeal to this court, and on the hearing, by an order of this court made and entered on the fifteenth day of February, 1873, the same was reversed. On petition by the appellant for a rehearing the case was heard again, and on the twenty-sixth day of February, and during the same term, the judgment of the district court was modified so as to reduce the amount of the judgment in the district court some eight hundred dollars.
Immediately on the rendering of the judgment of the
To this complaint an answer was put in alleging, among other things, that if tbe respondent is entitled to redeem tbe premises from tbe appellant, it is only on condition that be pay not only tbe amount for which tbe same were sold to him, but in addition tbe full amount of bis judgment against tbe said Peterson, as modified by tbe judgment of tbe supreme court entered on tbe twenty-sixth day of February, 1873; tbe same being a prior lien upon tbe same, as be alleged.
On tbe fourteenth day of February, 1874, tbe court entered a decree that the judgment of appellant against Peterson created a lien upon tbe real estate, subsequent or junior to tbe mortgage incumbrance of tbe respondent, and that tbe respondent should be entitled to redeem from tbe sale under tbe Griffin mortgage, by tbe payment to appellant of tbe sum for which the premises were sold to him, with interest, etc.
There are several errors assigned by tbe appellant as grounds on which be claims a reversal of tbe decree of the district court; but, in tbe view we take of tbe case, it is only necessary to notice but one, and that is, whether tbe decree declaring tbe mortgage of respondent prior in point of time and superior in equity as a lien to that of tbe judgment of tbe appellant, was erroneous or not.
There are two reasons urged by tbe counsel for tbe respondent in support of tbe decree, which- it is deemed im
In disposing of the first point,, it is only necessary to consider the statute upon the subject, and its application to this branch of the case. After prescribing, in sections 207 and 208 of the civil practice act of the second session, the mode in which docket entries of judgment shall be made, it is provided, in section 210, “that a transcript of the original docket, certified by the clerk, may be filed with the recorder of any other county, and from the time of filing, the judgment shall become a lien upon all the real property of the judgment debtor, not exempt from execution, in such county, owned by him at the time, or which he may after-wards acquire, until the said lien expires. The lien shall continue for two years, unless the judgment be previously satisfied.” It will be seen from this provision that it is not necessary, in order to create a lien upon the real estate of the judgment debtor, that the certified transcript of the original docket should be recorded; and hence, whether it be recorded or not, it can not affect the lien one way or another. If the proper transcript be filed with the recorder, it is sufficient to make the lien good for the time prescribed in the statute.
The proof in this case shows that the proper transcript was filed with the recorder, but in transcribing it upon the records of the office he made the clerical mistake in the initial letter of the Christian name of the judgment debtor. As the lien was' created by the filing of the transcript with the recorder, any error of his in recording it could not have the effect contended for by appellant’s counsel. The other reason, that the two judgments of this court on the fifteenth
Upon the first hearing of the appeal in the case of Peterson v. Taylor, a majority of the court were of the opinion that the judgment of the district court should be reversed, and that the cause should be remanded for a new trial. This decision was rendered on the fifteenth of February, but on petition of Taylor a rehearing was ordered on the twenty-first day of the same month, a part of which order is as follows: “And until a rehearing and decision are had upon the question, that all further proceedings in the case be stayed,” and on the twenty-sixth day, the record entry of the proceedings of the court was made as follows:
“ Now on this day the decision of the court was announced thereon, that the order heretofore entered in this case, reversing the judgment and remanding the case to the court below, be vacated, and that the respondent J. B. Taylor have judgment herein for five thousand and thirty-eight dollars and sixteen cents, together with interest on that sum from the date of the judgment of the district court, to wit, the third day of August, 1872, making in the aggregate the sum of five thousand three hundred and twenty-two dollars and fourteen cents.
“Whereupon it is now considered, ordered, adjudged, and decreed by the court here, that the order and judgment heretofore entered in this case, reversing the judgment and remanding the case to the court below, be, and the same is, hereby vacated and set aside. It is further ordered, adjudged, and decreed that the judgment of the court below be, and the same is, hereby reversed, and that the said J. B. Taylor, respondent, do have judgment against O. W. Peterson, appellant, for the sum of five thousand three hundred and twenty-two dollars and fourteen cents. It is*635 further ordered and adjudged that the order refusing a new trial be, and the same is, hereby affirmed, and that the respondent J. B. Taylor do pay the costs of this proceeding.”
The doctrine, that during the term of a court “the proceedings remain in the breast of the judges, and that not only the records during that time are subject to the revision of the court, but the judgment itself may be altered, revised, revoked, as well as amended, in respect to clerical errors and matters of form,” has not been disputed, nor can it well be, for it has been acted upon by the courts of England and of this country since' the time of Lord Coke, and it is so well settled as to become a rule of action in both countries, which can not now be overturned. Proceedings during the term are considered only in fieri, and subject to the control of the courts, and no rights can be considered as fully settled and determined until they pass beyond the control of the court by the adjournment of the term. It follows, therefore, that Taylor did not lose the benefit of his judgment against Peterson in the court below, nor of his lien under it, by the order of reversal entered on the fifteenth of February. Until the final adjudication of the case his rights under the judgment were only suspended, not destroyed, and hence, his lien could not be cut out or superseded by the mortgage given by Peterson to the appellant. In taking the mortgage the respondent took it with full notice of Taylor’s rights under this principle of law and in subordination thereto. He was not, in contemplation of law, a bona fide prior incumbrancer, so far as Taylor’s rights were concerned.
In considering the effect of the judgment of this court on the twenty-sixth- of February upon the question before us, our attention has been directed to the principle that courts, in construing the meaning and effect of their judgments, are governed by the same general principles as in the construction of statutes. It is said in Freeman on Judgments, p. 180, sec. 215, that “courts, in order to give a proper and' just effect to a judgment, sometimes look behind to see upon what it is founded, j ust as they would, in construing a statute, seek to ascertain the occasion and purpose of its enactment.” This principle, thus enunciated as a rule
The same principle is applicable in the exposition of wills. Sir William Blackstone, in his Commentaries, book 1, page 59, observes, “that the fairest and most rational method to interpret the will of the legislator is by exploring his intentions at the time the law was made, by signs the most natural and probable, and these signs are either the words, the context, the subject-matter, the effects and consequences, or the spirit and reason of the law.” The learned Chancellor Kent, in volume 1, marginal page 462, of his Commentaries, says: “It is an established rule in the exposition of statutes, that the intention of the law-giver is to be deduced from a view of the whole, and of every part of a statute, taken and compared together. The real intention, when accurately ascertained, will always prevail over the literal sense of terms. To know the laws, is not to Observe their mere words, but their force and power, and- the reason and intention of the law-giver will control the strict letter of the law, when the latter will lead to palpable injustice, contradiction, and absurdity.” These are maxims of sound interpretation, as the writer observes; and guided by them as rules by which we are. to determine the proper meaning of the judgment referred to, we have had but little difficulty at coming to our conclusions.
The judgment of the court below, as has been shown, was at first reversed, and the cause remanded for further proceedings. On a rehearing another judgment was rendered, technically, but not by any proper understanding of the true intention of the court, reversed so as in effect to vacate or annul the judgment below. To give it such effect would be simply to do what had already been done in the first instance, and to remit the parties to the right to have their matters litigated anew in the district court, subject to such directions as this court might give as to further proceedings.
In this view of the question, the only proper effect which is to be given to the word “reversed” is, that so much of the judgment of the court below as allowed interest, was reversed, and, as to the remainder, it was affirmed; any other exposition of its meaning would be unjust to the appellant, inasmuch as it would be to deprive him of those rights which it is the policy of the law to settle by a speedy and final adjudication in a court having competent authority over the whole subject-matter, when at the same time no benefit could possibly accrue to the other party by any further litigation or delay.
The inquiry in this connection may well be made, Of what use could another trial below be to either party ? In sending the case back to the district court for a new trial, it would be with directions only to render such judgment as it was competent for this court to render, thus entailing costs and delays to the parties unnecessarily. This would be an absurdity upon the face of it, and the rule that where the ex
It is the opinion of the court, that the decree of the district court be reversed, and the cause remanded with directions to said court to proceed to a final adjudication thereof, in conformity to this opinion.
It is further ordered, that the appellant pay one half of the costs of this court, and the respondent one half thereof.