75 Wis. 54 | Wis. | 1889
The court, under a stipulation of the parties, decided all the issues in the case except as to the value of the property. The court found that'the judgment upon which the execution was issued was void, because the affidavit, required in such cases by sec. 2896, R. S., to be made and annexed to the complaint, was not made. The court also found as a fact that no transcript of the judgment was filed in Crawford county until after the sheriff had made his levy upon such stock. It is not, however, found that the sheriff knew that fact at the time he made his levy. The court does not find as a question of law that the sheriff’s claim to the property under such levy, after the transcript was in fact filed, was not a lawful claim if the judgment upon which the execution issued was a valid judgment.
The judgment upon 'which such execution was issued ■was a judgment entered up in the circuit court of Vernon county upon a note with a warrant of attorney to confess judgment thereon attached thereto. The judgment record
J. C. Officer appeared as attorney for the defendant and filed the following answer: “ Circuit court, Vernon county. H. McKie, Plaintiff against Henry E. Rogers, Defendant. Answer. And noAv comes the above-named defendant, by J. C. Officer, his attorney, and by virtue of the power of attorney hereto annexed waives the service of process upon the said defendant, and enters his appearance herein, and confesses all the allegations in the plain tiff !s complaint, and that there is due from the defendant to the plaintiff on the note described therein the sum of four thousand two hundred and seven dollars and twenty-three cents, and hereby confesses and authorizes judgment for that amount, together with costs, and now here releases all errors Avhich may" intervene in entering up judgment hereon and in issuing execution on such judgment, and Avaives notice of the
It will be seen from the papers found in the judgment roll, that the power of attorney to confess judgment authorized the attorney who signed the cognovit “ to waive and release all errors that may intervene in entering said judgment or issuing execution thereon,” etc. It will also be seen that by the answer filed the attorney for the defendant “releases all errors which may intervene in entering up judgment hereon and in issuing execution on such judgment.”
Is this judgment void, as held by the court below, for want of the affidavit required by said sec. 2896, R. S.? After a careful consideration of the question, we think such judgment "is not void, especially as between the parties’to such judgment. In this case, the plaintiff, having taken title to the property knowing that the sheriff was in possession thereof holding the same under such judgment and execution, is in no better situation than the defendant in the execution would be had he brought the action. Sec. 2896, R. S., so far as applicable to this case, reads as follows : “ 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 case 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
Is not this affidavit a compliance writh the statute? It is a compliance so far as the statute requires the affidavit to be made and annexed to the complaint. It is also, we think, a compliance so far as it is necessary to be made by the plaintiff or some one in his behalf. It states that it is made by the affiant as the attorney of the plaintiff, and is made by him because the plaintiff is not a resident of the county where the action was commenced. We think there is enough appearing on the face of the affidavit to show that it was made on behalf of the plaintiff. Blaikie v. Griswold, 10 Wis. 293; McCabe v. Sumner, 40 Wis. 386; Wiley v. Aultman, 53 Wis. 560, 568. If there be any objection to the affidavit, it is that it does not state the amount due upon the note. It is true that the amount due on the note is not stated in the affidavit itself; but the amount due on the note is stated in the complaint, and the affidavit states that the facts stated in the complaint are true to the knowledge of the person making the affidavit. Suppose this affidavit had been made by the plaintiff in the action, would he not be guilty of perjury in making the affidavit, if he knew the amount stated as due in the complaint was not then due? It seems to me very clear that he would be equally guilty as be would have been if he had stated in his affidavit that at the time of making the same there wras the
But, if it be admitted that there might be a just criticism made as to the sufficiency of such affidavit, still, as between the parties to the action, the judgment is not void, although it might be voidable and set aside on the motion of the defendant. But in such case, when the judgment has been entered upon a warrant of attorney which authorizes the attorney confessing the judgment to release errors, and when such errors have been released by such attorney, the court would not set aside the judgment, even on motion, in the absence of any equities on the part of the defendant. See Van Steenwych v. Sackett, 17 Wis. 645, 657; McCabe v. Sumner, 40 Wis. 386, 389; Reiley v. Johnston, 22 Wis. 279, 286; Pirie v. Hughes, 43 Wis. 531, 534; Bonnell v. Gray, 36 Wis. 574, 581; Miller v. Earle, 24 N. Y. 110; Neusbaum v. Keim, 24 N. Y. 325; Hopkins v. Nelson, 24 N. Y. 518; Frasier v. Frasier, 9 Johns. 80. The cases of Nichols v. Kribs, 10 Wis. 76; Thompson v. Hintgen, 11 Wis. 112, and others of the like nature, were cases arising under a statute which authorized a confession of judgment without a war’rant of attorney, and in which there was no authority to release errors on the part of any one. The above cases, we think, fully establish the rule that the judgment entered in this case was not void as against the defendant in the judgment; nor do we think that the same would have been set aside as irregular, even upon the motion of the defendant, in the absence of anything showing that it was inequitable as against him. While the judgment stood it was sufficient to justify the sheriff in levying the execution issued thereon.
But it is said the execution was prematurely issued, and so was no justification to the sheriff. Under our statute an execution cannot be regularly issued, running to the sheriff of a county other than that in which the judgment is rendered, until a transcript of such judgment has been filed in
By the Court.— The judgment of the circuit court is reversed, and the cause remanded with directions to render judgment in favor of the defendant in the action.