delivered the opinion of the court.
This is ¿ suit brought by the Portland Construction Company, as assignee of Messrs. Wolfe & Callahan, to foreclose a lien upon the property of the Sisters of Charity for excavating for the foundation of St. Vincent’s Hospital, at Portland. The answer of the Sisters of Charity admits that there was due a balance of seven thousand four hundred and forty-two dollars and sixteen cents, which sum they deposited with the 'clerk, hut at the trial, on November 14, 1892, the courTlbund that there was due in addition thereto the sum of one thousand three hundred and seven dollars and .ninety^eigEt centsP'and decreed that if this amount was not paid the property should be sold to satisfy the lien. On November 15, 1892, the Sisters of Charity paid into court the amount so found due, and the plaintiff on the next day drew from the clerk the whole amount so tendered and paid, but did not cancel the decree of record. The money was kept until November 19,1892, when, becoming dissatisfied, it was returned to the clerk, and on December 7, 1892, the plaintiff attempted to appeal from said decree by serving and! filing a notice thereof, wherein it sought to recover the snm of three thousand nine hundred and fifty-four dollars and eighty-seven cents; an attorney’s fee of one thousand dollars; interest on the whole claim from October 1,1891; and the costs and disbursements, in addition to the amount so decreed. The Sisters of Charity, on January 7, 1893, filed a motion in the cojirt below for an order requiring
The Sisters of Charity move to dismiss the appeal from the decree of November 14, 1892, and contend that it has been paid and satisfied, while the plaintiff contends that the appeal is from that part of the decree which failed to award the full amount of its claim, and that the acceptance of the fruits of the decree is not a waiver of its right to appeal. Judge Elliott, in his work on Appellate Procedure, § 150, says “It is a general rule that a party who accepts the benefit of a judgment waives the right to prosecute an appeal from it.” Mr. Freeman, in his valuable work on Judgments, § 426, says that “Payment will of course operate as a release, if made to the plaintiff or to any person authorized by him to receive it.” And the same learned author at section 466, says that “ Payment produces a permanent and irrevocable discharge, after,, which the judgment cannot be restored by any subsequent agreement.” The deposit of this money with the clerk was not a payment of the decree, and could not operate as a discharge thereof until the plaintiff accepted it. “A tender upon a judgment, if not accepted, does not operate as an extinguishment of the lien”: People v. Beebe,
In Moore v. Floyd,
In Shook v. Colohan,
In the case at bar, plaintiff cannot have a decree in the court below for more than the amount tendered, and here for an additional sum. The issue there tried was the difference between the sum tendered and the amount claimed, and the appeal, if properly taken, brings up every part of the decree in addition to the tender, and is so closely connected with and mutually dependent upon the amount involved that it would necessitate an examination into the whole question of the amount due in excess of the tender.
The plaintiff having accepted the fruits of the decree the lien thereof was dischaiged, and there was nothing from which to appeal. The return of the money could not reinstate the decree so as to give this court jurisdiction, and the motion to dismiss the appeal must be allowed. ’
