181 Wis. 72 | Wis. | 1923
Judgments on cognovit are permitted under the statutes of this state, which are as follows:
“Section 2895. A judgment upon a bond or. note, with or without a warrant of attorney, may be rendered without action either for money due or to become due, or to secure any person against contingent liability on behalf of the defendant, or both, in the manner prescribed in the next section.”
*74 “Section 2896. The plaintiff shall file with his complaint an answer signed by the defendant or some attorney in his behalf, confessing the amount claimed in the complaint or some part thereof, and in ease such answer is signed by an attorney an instrument authorizing judgment to be confessed or, entered shall be produced to the court or judge signing the judgment and shall be made a part of the judgment roll. The plaintiff or some one in his behalf shall make and annex to the complaint an affidavit stating the amount due or to become due on the note or bond, or if such note or bond is given to secure any contingent liability the affidavit must state concisely the facts constituting such liability and must show that the sum "confessed does not exceed the same. No other affidavit shall be necessary although more than a year and a day may have expired since the date of the warrant or instrument. The judgment shall be signed by the court or a judge and shall be thereupon entered and docketed by the clerk and enforced in the same manner as judgments in other cases.”
Judgments on cognovit were permitted at the common law, but where the legislature has acted upon the subject, as in this, state, we consider that the statutes supersede the common law and that only such judgments are now permitted on cognovit as come within the statutes. It will be noted that the statute provides for such judgments only upon bonds or notes, and the question then arises as to whether or not a lease such as here under consideration is included within the term “note or bond.”
1 Black on Judgments, § 50, has this to'say:
“All judgments rendered upon the confession of the defendant may be divided into two classes: 1. Those entered in an action regularly commenced by the issuance and service of process. 2. Those entered upon the confession of the defendant, or his warrant of attorney, without the institution of an action. The former class of judgments are well known to the common law and must be tested and sustained" by rules and principles existing independently of statutes, while judgments of the latter, class derive all their efficacy from positive law and must conform, in order to be*75 valid, to all the requirements and formalities set up by the legislature.”
“It is well established that the authority to confess a judgment without process must be clear and explicit, and must be strictly pursued or the judgment will be void. Judgments by confession are closely scrutinized, and their validity more frequently questioned than any other kind of legal proceedings. While the design of statutes authorizing such judgments is altogether proper, those who desire to overreach their creditors or to- cover their property by prior incumbrance resort to this mode of creating liens more than to any other. Since judgments by confession without antecedent process have no basis other than statutes, which are in derogation of the common law, a strict compliance with the statutory provisions is deemed essential. Nevertheless as between the parties a judgment by confession may be good, notwithstanding a failure to comply fully with statutory requirements. In jurisdictions in which the law requires that judgments be signed by the court, such a law applies to judgments by confession, and renders them void if not signed, in the manner required.” 15 Ruling Case Law, “Judgments,” § 103.
We think the above correctly states the law, and we find no authority for the entry of judgment in this case under the warrant of attorney in the lease. A real-estate lease is not a bond or note within the statute.
The circuit court should have vacated the judgment and execution on the motion, on the ground that it was entered without jurisdiction.
By the Court. — The order of the circuit court is reversed, with directions to grant the motion of the appellant to vacate the judgment and the execution issued thereon, ac- . cording to this opinion.