43 Wash. 129 | Wash. | 1906
In 1903 Wesley Davis and Lenora Davis, as plaintiffs, brought an action against George M. Shreeder and Mace C. Green and the Tacoma Railway & Power Company, as defendants, to recover damages for a tort alleged to have been committed against the person of Lenora Davis by one Cromwell, an employee of the defendants, acting in the line of his duty as such. They recovered a joint judgment against both Shreeder and Green and the Railway Company, and both gave notice of appeal theretfrom. Shreeder and Green did not perfect their appeal, nor did they join in the appeal of the Railway Company, and their attempted appeal was dismissed on the motion of the defendants made at the time the cause was called for hearing in this court. The appeal of the Railway Company was heard on its merits, and the judgment as co it was reversed
After the remittitur had gone down, and without taking any further proceedings against the Railway Cbmpany, the judgment creditors directed the clerk to issue an execution on the judgment against the defendants Shreeder and Green. These defendants thereupon brought an action to restrain the issuance of an execution against them, and to cancel the judgment. A temporary restraining order was issued on the filing of the complaint, and a day fixed and notice given for hearing an application for a temporary injunction. On the hearing of the application, the court entered an order quashing the preliminary restraining order, and refusing to grant a temporary injunction. From this order the present appeal is taken.
But one question is presented by the record; namely, did the reversal of the judgment as to the Tacoma Railway & Power Company necessarily operate as a reversal of the judgment as to the defendants Shreeder and Green. We are of the opinion that it did not-. By section 6521 of the code (Ballinger’s) it is provided that upon an appeal the supreme court may affirm, reverse, or modify any judgment or order appealed from, as to any or all of the parties; and by section 6501 (Id.), that any party not appealing, or joining in the appeal of his codefendant shall not derive any benefit from the appeal except from the necessities of the case. These sections of the statute' we think are controlling. Their plain and obvious purpose was to obviate the rule, prevailing in some jurisdictions, which requires a judgment to be treated as an entirety, and vacated, modified, or reversed as a whole and as to all of the parties thereto^ regardless of the fact that the application to so vacate, modify, or reverse may be made by only a part of the whole number of parties adversely affected by it. The effect of the statute is to make
Undoubtedly the common law rule, as construed by a majority of the courts, is to the effect that a judgment against two or more defendants, even for a tort, is an entirety, and must be reversed as to all of the parties if reversed as against one. But the courts of the states whose statutes contain pro' visions similar to our own generally hold that the rule ú modified by the statute. In Van Slyck v. Snell, 6 Lansing (N. Y.) 299, a joint judgment was recovered in a justice’s court against two defendants for trespassing animals. On appeal by one of the defendants to the county court the judgment was reversed as to both defendants. This was held error on an appeal to the' supreme court, that court saying:
“The Code, See. 366, is very explicit upon this point, and seems to leave no room for doubt or hesitation. ‘In giving
In Nichols v. Dunphy, 58 Cal. 605, the plaintiff recovered a judgment against, two defendants for a tort in the sum of five thousand dollars. One of the defendants appealed and the judgment was reversed as to him. Afterwards, the plaintiff caused an execution to issue on the judgment against the other defendant, which execution the superior court recalled and ordered quashed. On an appeal this order was reversed. In the opinion it was said:
“We think the court erred ip quashing the execution against Carmen. The judgment against her was unaffected by the appeal of her oodefendant, and the subsequent proceedings thereon. Carmen could also have appealed from the judgment if she had desired to do so. Had she done so, and-the facts had established that the damage was caused by her negligence, and that her codefendant did not in any wise participate in the wrong, this court undoubtedly could, and would, have affirmed the judgment- as to her, and x’eversed it as to William Dunphy. (Code Civ. Proc., Secs. 414, 578;
And in Bates-Smith Inv. Co. v. Scott, 56 Neb. 475, 76 N. W. 1063, it was held that the rule of the common law requiring a judgment to be reversed as to all of the judgment debtors if reversed as to one of them did not obtain in that state by reason of the statute permitting judgments to be given for or against on© or more of several plaintiffs, or for or against one or more of several defendants. Speaking of the question, the court said:
“It is contended for the company that a judgment is an entirety, and if against two or more, and either erroneous or void as to one party, and for such reason subject to be vacated or reversed, the action must be in regard to it as an entirety; that it cannot be good as to one and bad as to another or others, and will not be so held. (1 Black, Judgments, Sec. 211, and cases cited in notes 146, 147; 11 Ency. PI. & Prac., 858, note 1.) The doctrine of entirety of judgment is on© of the common law and has been pushed to- the extreme; but by many courts the rule has been announced that such a judgment may be voidable or void as against one defendant, but binding on another or others in a collateral attack; (1 Black, Judgments, Sec. 211, note 148; 11 Ency. PL & Prac., 859, note 2.) The weight of authority seems to favor the doctrine that in appeal or error proceedings such judgment must be as an entirety affirmed or reversed as to all parties and cannot be severed. (1 Black, Judgments, Sec. 211, note 151; Ency. Pl. & Pr., 859, note 4.) In this state it has been said: ‘If a suit be brought against three parties jointly and severally liable, two of whom only are served, it is not error to- enter judgment against those served and omit therefrom the other.’ The action was upon a note. There was service of summons on two, and no service on the other. Judgment was rendered against -the two, and nothing stated therein relative to the one who was not served. It was also said in the opinion of this court, to which it was pre
See, also, Dawson v. Schloss, 93 Cal. 194, 29 Pac. 31.
But while the question seems never to have been discussed
These cases cited are dissimilar in their facts to the case at bar, but they sustain the general principle that judgments under our statute are not regarded as entireties, but are subject to such division and apportionment as to be rer versed on appeal for errors as to one defendant, while standing good as to another.
The judgment appealed from must be affirmed, and it is so ordered.
Mount, C. J., Rudkin, Dunbar, Crow, and Hadley, JJ., concur.