CHAVEZ v. CHAVEZ
Decision Date | 09 January 1950 |
Docket Number | No. 5213,5213 |
Citation | 54 N.M. 73,213 P.2d 438 |
Parties | CHAVEZ v. CHAVEZ. |
Court | New Mexico Supreme Court |
Robert H. LaFollette, Albuquerque, for appellant.
Owen B. Marron, Albuquerque, Alfred H. McRae, Albuquerque, for appellee.
This is an appeal from an order denying motion to vacate a judgment for irregularity.
Appellee alleged that appellant assaulted and beat him and as a result he had been damaged in the amount of $15,000.00. Appellant entered a general denial to the charges. The cause was tried to the court without a jury and a judgment for appellee, awarding damages of $3,500.00, was entered on January 8, 1949. On May 11, 1949, appellant filed a motion to vacate the judgment for irregularity which motion was summarily denied.
The claimed irregularity consists in the trial court's failure to correctly remember the testimony of both appellant and appellee which resulted in their testimony being disregarded, and without which, it is claimed, there is no substantial evidence to support the judgment. It may be granted that the judgment is erroneous but appellant took no action in the lower court to correct the error.
Mere misapprehension as to the nature, the extent of effect of the evidence, or the trial court's failure to remember it, will not warrant interference with a judgment regularly entered, after the thirty days' statutory time in which the trial court has control of its judgment. When the trial court has heard the testimony and has reached a final conclusion therefrom, whether correctly or otherwise, its judgment is not to be disturbed under statutes authorizing relief for mistake, inadvertence or irregularity, but by some other appropriate remedy as motion for new trial or appeal.
'Independent of statutory provisions and notwithstanding the general rule limiting the court's authority over judgments tothe term at which they were rendered, it has power to correct nonjudicial mistakes in its proceedings and may annul within a reasonable time, orders and judgments inadvertently or improvidently made. Where the court has been deceived or is laboring under a mistaker or misapprehension as to the state of the record or as to the existence of other extrinsic facts upon which its action is predicated, it may vacate the judgment which it would not otherwise have made. * * *
'* * * it is well settled that neither a final judgment nor a final decree, pronounced upon a hearing on the merits, can be set aside upon motion after the term, or, where terms have been abolished, after it has become final, for any judicial errors, either of law or fact, into which the court may have fallen. The law does not permit any judicial tribunal to exercise a revisory power over its own adjudications, after they have, in contemplation of the law, passed out of the At 1, Freeman on Judgments, 5th.Ed., * * *'Secs. 200, 221.
At 49 C.J.S., Judgments, § 275, the author states the rule thus: ...
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