59 P. 327 | Or. | 1899
delivered the opinion.
This is a motion to dismiss an appeal. Plaintiff commenced a suit to determine an adverse claim to lots numbered 1 and 2 and the north half of lot No. 6 in block No. 59, in the Oity of Salem, alleging that he was the owner in fee and in the possession thereof, and that the defendants claimed an estate or interest therein adverse to him, but that such claim was without right. The defendants, having denied the material allegations of the complaint, alleged that at the commencement of the suit, and for a long time prior thereto, they were seised in fee and in the
It remains to be seen whether the title which plaintiff secured by coercion can be relied upon as a settlement of the controversy involved in this suit. In Edwards v. Perkins, 7 Or. 149, it was held that a party voluntarily paying a judgment rendered against him is not thereby precluded from prosecuting an appeal therefrom. The reason assigned for the conclusion there reached was based upon the fact that, unless the undertaking on appeal. stipulated for the payment of the judgment, if affirmed, the respondent, notwithstanding the appeal, could enforce it, and the payment was simply another mode of effecting the purpose of .such undertaking. Mr. Justice Boise, speaking of the rights of the appellant, in rendering the decision, says, “We think he is in no worse position from having paid the judgment voluntarily than if he had settled the execution with costs.” In Plano Mfg. Co. v. Rasey, 69 Wis. 246 (34 N. W. 85), it is held that, in order to justify the supreme court in dismissing an appeal on the ground that the litigation is settled by pay
So, too, circumstances may intervene, which, by operation of law, and without the volition of the appellant, would terminate the controversy involved in the appeal, and leave no subject-matter upon which a reversal of the judgment could operate, thereby rendering the appeal ineffectual. Thus, in Kidd v. Morrison, Phill. Eq. 31, in 1861, a suit was instituted in the trial court of Moore County, North Carolina, to cancel a deed for a slave, alleged to have been obtained by fraud. In 1863 the cause was set for hearing, and transferred to the supreme court of that state, which, in 1866, dismissed the bill as if the suit had abated, requiring each party to pay his own costs. Mr. Chief Justice Pearson, speaking for the court, in rendering the decision, says : “At the filing of the bill the slave was in the possession of the complainant, and continued in her possession up to the time of his emancipation by act of law. So that the bill presents no question in respect to profits or heirs, and the sole question-made is in respect to the title. That question is now gone. It has passed away by the political death of the slave as completely as if he had died a natural death.” In State v. Martin, 30 Or. 108 (47 Pac. 196), it was held that an appeal from a judgment on conviction of a crime
Dismissed.