65 Iowa 114 | Iowa | 1884
A judgment was rendered by a justice of the peace in favor of D. Wayne & Co., and against E. Webber, N. Webber, and A. Sclilisman, for $148.60. The action in which said judgment was rendered was on a promissory note, executed by the defendants, F. Webber and N. Webber. Defendant, Sclilisman, was liable as an indorser of said note. All the defendants were served with notice of the pendency of said suit. Sclilisman appeared and defended against the claim, but the Webbers made default. It is not shown, by any record made by the justice, that there was any consent by the parties that he should take jurisdiction of the case. A transcript of the judgment was filed in the office of the clerk of the circuit court, and execution was issued thereon, and the property in question was sold on said execution. When the transcript was filed in the clerk’s office, the property belonged to the defendant, F. Webber, but before the execution sale he sold and conveyed it to Frank Kullenberg, who had no actual notice of the existence of the judgment when he bought. The judgment, in the mean time, had been assigned by Wayne & Co. to Schlisman, and he was the purchaser at the sheriff’s sale. After the execution sale, Kullenberg filed his motion to set said sale aside on the following grounds: “(1) That the applicant is an innocent purchaser of said property, and that he had no notice of the pretended claim which plaintiff alleges to have against said property, and, as against' him, the judgment is no lien on. the property; (2) That, although said judgment was filed in the judgment docket at the time he purchased the premises, yet it did not convey notice to him of the outstanding lien, for the reason that it does not show that the court which
I. It is contended by appellee that the assignment of the judgment by Wayne & Oo. to Schlisman, one of the parties against whom it is rendered, operates, necessarily, to extinguish it, and that, for this reason, the sale of the property on the .execution issued after such assignment is void. We think, however, that this question is not raised by any assignment of the motion, and we are satisfied that it was neither presented in the argument of the motion in the circuit court, nor considered by the court in determining it. Appellee is therefore not entitled to have the question considered here.
II. The question which is raised by the motion, and which was passed upon by the circuit court, is whether the judgment and the subsequent proceedings thereunder, including the sale of the property, are void by reason of the failure of the record to show that the consent of the parties was given that the justice might take jurisdiction of the case; or, in other words, whether the failure of the j ustice to embody in his record a statement of the facts on which h'is jurisdiction depends, has the effect to render his judgment and the subsequent proceedings thereunder void.
The jurisdiction of justices of the peace is defined by section 3508 of the Code as follows: “Within the prescribed limit, it extends to all civil actions, except cases by equitable
Reversed.