34 Minn. 48 | Minn. | 1885
The defendant bank recovered a judgment against the plaintiff’s assignor, and execution was issued and levied upon property of the latter. Within 10 days thereafter the judgment debtor made an assignment to the plaintiff under the insolvent law of 1881. (Laws 1881, c. 148.) By the terms of the statute cited (§ 1) the effect of the assignment was to dissolve the levy under execution, unless the complaint in the action in which the judgment was recovered was “filed in the office of the clerk of the court twenty days prior to the entry of the judgment.”
The issue in this case was as to whether the complaint in the action referred to was so filed. The office of the clerk of the court is adjacent to the court-room of the district court. More than 20 days prior to the entry of the judgment, the complaint in the action was delivered to the clerk of court, to be filed. The evidence is conflicting
The cause haying been tried by the court, the facts were found to be that the complaint was taken to the office of the clerk to be filed; that it was handed to the clerk “as the latter officer was passing from his office into the court-room,” where he indorsed and deposited the paper as before stated; and that the complaint “was never filed or on file in the office of said clerk until the said second day of December, 1884, (the day of entering judgment,) nor was any entry thereof made in the register of actions or elsewhere in said clerk’s office” until the day last named.
Upon the facts so found it was considered that the indorsed filing upon the complaint and the entry in the register of actions should be amended so as to show the complaint to have been filed on the second day of December; and that the assignee of the judgment debtor was entitled to the property. Judgment was entered accordingly, from which this appeal was taken.
The court having determined, as a matter of fact, that the complaint was not filed in the office of the clerk until the day on which judgment was entered, the judgment must be sustained. The argument of the appellant is based upon the assumption of the fact that the complaint was delivered to the clerk, to be filed, in his office, and that he carried it from his office into the court-room. But there is no such finding of fact expressed, nor can we so interpret the meaning of the finding that it was handed to the clerk “as the latter officer was passing from his office into the court-room,” in view of the more distinct determination of fact that it “was never filed or on file in the office of said clerk until the said second day of December.” The judgment is right upon the facts as found by the court, and they are sustained by the evidence tending to show that the complaint was delivered to the clerk in the court-room, and not in his office.
If the appellant deemed the fourth finding of fact above recited to
Judgment affirmed.
Vanderburgh, J., did not hear the argument, and took no part in the decision of this case.