91 Minn. 254 | Minn. | 1904
Motion to have a judgment satisfied and discharged of record, upon the claim that such relief should be granted as a matter of equitable right, under G. S. 1894, § 5435. The motion was denied by the court below, and this appeal- is from that order.
The application to have the judgment discharged was based upon a showing by affidavits of the applicants from which it appeared that on July 19, 1892, respondent agreed to convey to appellants, for the sum of $3,000, one hundred twenty acres of land, $1,000 of the pur
While the matter was in this situation, and after this judgment had been entered, the owner of the land (respondent) brought suit to enforce the forfeiture in the purchase contract, and to recover the property, under the stringent provisions therein authorizing that remedy. The complaint in this latter suit sets forth the right of the plaintiff therein to the relief prayed for, resting wholly upon an enforcement of her rights under the forfeiture clause. No answer was interposed, and judgment was entered for plaintiff, as well as for the recovery of the property.
The motion to vacate was served upon the attorney for the respondent who appeared within the proper time, and the statements set forth in the accompanying affidavits of the moving parties, showing the facts above set forth, were not in any way controverted or disputed, and it is insisted that, as a matter of right, they require a cancellation of the money judgment, upon the ground that, in equity and good conscience, it should not be enforced, since the remedy sought and granted in the action to have the contract annulled and for possession- of the property discharged the appellants from all obligations to pay any further portion of the purchase price of the land. "
The power of courts to control their records, and to set aside and cancel judgments which have been paid in fact, although still remain
“Whenever a judgment is satisfied in fact otherwise than upon an execution, it is the duty of the party or attorney to give such acknowledgment, and upon motion the court may compel it, or may order the entry of satisfaction to be made without it.” G. S. 1894, § 5435.
While the strict terms of the statute apply to a judgment which has been paid in fact, perhaps by cash, we are clear that, where such facts and conditions exist as are tantamount to such payment, this relief should be granted. It is true that such relief might be obtained, and probably would be ordinarily asked, in an equitable suit against the owner of the judgment to annul the same, but in this proceeding the facts are as fully set forth as they could be in a complaint in an action for that purpose. The defendants appearing on the hearing contested the right of the court to grant the relief upon the ground that the facts set forth did not authorize an order of cancellation, thereby conceding the jurisdiction of the court, and practically the facts alleged in the affidavits. We have recognized the power of the district court, upon a showing of facts upon affidavits, to order the satisfaction of a judgment upon proper grounds, where such satisfaction becomes an equitable right, rather than to relegate, the party seeking such relief to an action therefor. Woodford v. Reynolds, 36 Minn. 155, 30 N. W. 757. In that case the satisfaction was refused upon the ground that the facts were in -dispute, and it was held that it was a fair exercise of judicial discretion to leave the parties to their remedy in a suit which had been commenced for the same purpose; but in this proceeding the facts are not in dispute, and are as clearly established as they could be upon a judicial determination; and we see no just reason, if they warrant the remedy, why it should not be granted.
It must be conceded that whatever the purchasers of the land had actually paid thereon under the contract could not be recovered back. They had lost not only this, but further they had lost the land, which was recovered by the vendor; and it seems palpably inequitable and unjust that the vendor could have her land, what had been paid upon St, and likewise enforce further payments, since it was provided in the
But it is suggested that the fact that judgment had been obtained for part of the purchase price, which had been unpaid, placed the parties in a different position as to the balance of the purchase money, which had not been reduced to judgment. We do not appreciate this distinction. The judgment was but evidence of an indebtedness which, in justice, should be inoperative and of no avail by reason of the action to recover the land, and the result thereby secured. At the time when this latter action was brought, and the judgment thereon rendered by which the land was recovered, as appears from the showing made, it had been sold to third parties.- This is no further important than as emphasizing the injustice of the attempt to enforce the judgment in a foreign state, and the further fact that relief might well be sought by motion, and upon showing by affidavits, which was a practical, and perhaps necessary, resource to purge the records of the court of a judgment whose enforcement in another jurisdiction would be oppressive and wrongful.
We are satisfied, upon the showing made, that the court should have set aside the judgment upon the ground' that it should no longer be permitted to remain an obligation from which the appellants were required to protect themselves.
Order reversed and cause remanded for further proceedings.