49 Wash. 381 | Wash. | 1908
Action by F. W. Peabody and Katie A. Peabody, his wife, against George F. Meacham and Lucia M. Meacham, his wife, to quiet title to real estate in Snohomish county. From a judgment in favor of plaintiffs, the defendants appeal.
The points raised by appellants are that it affirmatively appears from the foreclosure proceedings that the court was without jurisdiction, because the certificate of delinquency was not filed in the office of the clerk-until June 10, 1901, which was after the first publication of notice had been made; that the statutes then in force, § 3, ch. 178, Laws of 1901, page 385, provided that the county treasurer should issue certificates of delinquency to the county and file the same with the clerk of the superior court, and that thereupon foreclosure proceedings should be commenced; that under this act the actual filing of the certificate was a condition precedent to the commencement of the foreclosure; that without such filing the court obtained no jurisdiction, and that the subsequent nunc pro tunc order changing the date of filing to May 9, 1901, which was made without notice on an ex parte application of the county attorney, was unauthorized and void. It is conceded and stipulated that the lots in dispute were included in the same foreclosure proceeding which was sustained by this court in Washington Timber & Loan Co. v. Smith, 34 Wash. 625, 76 Pac. 267. The questions now raised were there determined adversely to appellants’ contention. An examination of our opinion in that case will show that the facts now before us were there stated and passed upon. We then said:
“The next objection to the sufficiency of the foreclosure is, that the certificates of delinquency were not properly filed in the office of the clerk of the superior court before publication -of summons. The complaint, however, shows that a nunc pro tunc order was made by the court in the foreclosure cause, by which it was declared that the certificates were in fact filed in the clerk’s office on May 9,1901, and it was directed that they*384 be so marked, which was done, and the file mark was changed from June 10, 1901, to the above named date. That date was fifteen days before the first publication of the summons. It having been already determined that the court had jurisdiction of the cause by reason of the time the certificates were issued, and it appearing by the record that the certificates were filed in time, it follows that the point now raised relates to a mere irregularity which should have been raised in the foreclosure case. While the nunc pro tunc order was made after judgment, yet, assuming, as we must, that the record speaks the truth, the correction was such a one as could have been made during the progress of the action, under § 18, p. 299, Laws of 1899. Appellant is therefore estopped to raise the objection now. See Bal. Code, § 1767 (P. C. § 8704). Also, Swanson v. Hoyle, 32 Wash. 169, 72 Pac. 1011. The summons and its publication, we think, complied with the law. The property owner was therefore within the jurisdiction of the court, and was required to take notice of the action.”
The arguments of the appellants now presented are substantially the same as those which were made in the Washington Timber Company case. The entire substance of their present contention is, (1) that the certificate of delinquency was not filed prior to June 10, 1901; (2) that the publication was commenced'without authority of law; (3) that the judgment entered thereon was void; and (4) that the nunc pro tumc order was also void. The fact that on May 9, 1901, the county treasurer took the certificate of delinquency into the clerk’s office for the express purpose of filing the same is not disputed, although the deputy clerk at that time failed to make the proper filing marks and entries. On June 10, 1901, an inadvertent and erroneous entry was made. Afterwards the judgment was entered and a sale made to the county, but later and before the appellants acquired their present alleged title by quitclaim deed from defendants, in the foreclosure proceeding, and before respondents acquired their title from Snohomish county, the trial court, by a nunc pro tunc order, directed a correction of the filing marks and records to recite the actual facts.
*385 “A court of record has an inherent power over its own records which includes the authority to require the coi'rection of any errors that may creep into them. This power is not lost by lapse of time or the expiration of a term of court. The duty of a court to see that its records speak the truth is an affirmative and active one, and it is not a jurisdictional prerequisite to its performance that one party should invoke it by motion or that the other should have notice before action is taken.” Christisen v. Bartlett, 73 Kan. 401, 84 Pac. 530, 85 Pac. 594.
The judgment is affirmed.
Hadley, C. J., Mount, Dunbar, Fullerton, and Rudkin, JJ., concur.