16 Wash. 676 | Wash. | 1897
ON MOTION TO MODIFY JUDGMENT.
The opinion of the court was delivered by
The Bank of Tacoma and the Tacoma Trust & Savings Bank held a note for $18,500 against the Cascade Oatmeal Company, secured by a mortgage upon certain real estate. Prior to the failure of the Bank of Tacoma they transferred and assigned this note and mortgage to appellant, N. C. Richards, as administrator of the estate, of one Humphreys, in payment of an alleged indebtedness of the bank to him. The respondent Titlow, as receiver of the bank, instituted this action, alleging fraud in the assignment and transfer of the note and mortgage, and praying that it be set aside; that his right to the note .and mortgage, as receiver, be established, and for a decree of foreclosure. After answer by Richards and a trial on the issues made by said answer, the trial court decreed in accordance with the prayer of the complaint and gave the respondent judgment against the Cascade Oatmeal Company for the amount of the balance due on the note, and decreed foreclosure in the usual form. ' From a portion of this decree Richards appealed. The judgment of the lower court was affirmed by this court on appeal (15 Wash. 652, 47 Pac. 19), and judgment was entered in favor of the
An objection to this motion is made by the appellant to the effect that this court has lost jurisdiction of the cause and of the judgment by reason of the remittitur having been transmitted to, and filed in, the superior court. We think this objection is untenable. The appellate court has inherent power to correct its judgment during the terms in which the judgment was entered. The respondent, under our practice, has no notice of what the judgment is until it is remitted. The presumption must be that the judgment is entered in accordance with the opinion of the court, and it would be a hard and unjust rule to announce that, if by inadvertence or mistake the judgment should be entered not in conformity with the opinion, the respondent would have no redress. We think that in all jurisdictions, under a practice similar to ours, the court has power to recall the remittitur and enforce the judgment according to the opinion rendered in the case.
The other objection is still more technical, viz.,, that in any event the remittitur must be recalled before a motion is made to correct the judgment, for in effect the motion to correct the judgment is a motion to recall the remittitur.
On the merits, however, we think the motion must be denied. A bond is given on the theory of compensation in damages, and not on the theory of an arbitrary payment of the amount of the bond in case of affirmation of the judgment. The appellate court
The respondent bases his right to the modification of this judgment upon State ex rel. Commercial National Bank v. Superior Court of King County, 14 Wash. 365 (44 Pac. 859), and upon the statute construed in that case (Laws 1893, p. 131, § 23), which provides that “upon the affirmance of a judgment on appeal for the payment of money, the supreme court shall render judgment against both the appellant and his sureties in the appeal bond for the amount of the judgment appealed from (in case the bond was conditioned so as to support such judgment), and for the damages and costs awarded on the appeal.” It is true that in that case it was held that a judgment of foreclosure was a judgment for the payment of money, and that the bond must be executed in double the amount of the judgment, and that the court had no authority to fix the amount of such bond. But the real question involved in this case was not involved in that one. All that was decided there was that in such a case the statutory bond, viz., a bond in double the amount of the judgment, must be executed in order to stay the execution. But it was not decided that, upon the affirmance of the judgment, the respondent, in case he succeeded, should have judgment against the sureties and the appellant for the full
The money judgment in this case was not rendered against appellant Richards, and from that portion of the judgment he does not appeal. But his appeal is substantially from the judgment of the court that the note and mortgage were fraudulently transferred to him by the other defendant. Incidentally, to preserve his rights, it was necessary for him to appeal from all that portion of the judgment which directed a sale of the mortgaged premises and the application of the moneys arising from such sale. So that this case does not fall within the provision of the statute which provides for the affirmance of the judgment, because the statute provides that the judgment shall be entered against the sureties in the appeal bond for the amount of the judgment appealed from in case the bond was conditioned so as to support such judgment. This bond is plainly not so conditioned because, as we have before said, the judgment for the deficiency was not appealed from.
This is not inconsistent with what was decided in State, ex rel Bank, v. Superior Court, supra, for the rea
The motion will be denied.
Scott, C. J., and Anders and Reavis, JJ., concur.
Gordon, J., concurs in the result.