State v. City of Stafford
Citation | 161 P. 657,99 Kan. 265 |
Decision Date | 09 December 1916 |
Docket Number | 20416[1] |
Parties | STATE EX REL. BEALS, CO. ATTY., v. CITY OF STAFFORD ET AL. |
Court | United States State Supreme Court of Kansas |
After the expiration of the term at which a judgment was rendered and after that judgment has been affirmed in the Supreme Court, the trial court, on personal knowledge of what took place at the time the judgment was rendered, has power to correct the journal entry so as to make it correctly recite the judgment that was actually rendered.
Where after a judgment has been affirmed by this court on appeal, the journal entry of that judgment is corrected so as to make the journal entry recite the judgment that was rendered, all questions that could have been presented on that appeal are concluded, even though the corrected journal entry recites a judgment different from that set out in the original journal entry.
Quære: Can the state recover personal judgment against those who wrongfully obtain money from a municipal corporation where none of the money belongs to the state?
Appeal from District Court, Stafford County.
Action by the State, on the relation of Ray H. Beals, County Attorney, against the City of Stafford and others. Judgment for plaintiff, and defendants appeal. Affirmed.
C. M. Williams, of Hutchinson, for appellants.
Ray H. Beals, of St. John, for appellee.
The defendants appeal from an order denying their motion to vacate and set aside a journal entry of judgment.
An opinion was rendered in this case in State ex rel. v. City of Stafford, 92 Kan. 343, 140 P. 868. At that time the case was presented to this court on a single question--that there was no evidence to support the finding of the trial court that $2,200 of the amount paid to the Larabee Light & Power Company was for the surrender of its franchise. This court held that there was sufficient evidence to support that finding and affirmed the judgment.
The city of Stafford voted to issue bonds for the purpose of constructing an electric light plant. Defendant Larabee Light & Power Company, under a franchise, operated an electric light plant in the city. This action was commenced in the name of the state by the county attorney of Stafford county to cancel and rescind a purchase by the city of the electric light plant of the Larabee Light & Power Company, and to order the defendants to repay to the city treasurer $14,000, the amount that had been paid by the city to the Larabee Light & Power Company for the property purchased, and to recover judgment against the defendants and each of them for $14,000 in the event that the defendants were unable to repay that sum to the city. The journal entry of judgment was signed by Neeley & Malloy, attorneys for plaintiff, and by F. L. Martin and C. M. Williams, attorneys for defendants. That journal entry was not submitted to, nor approved by, the county attorney or the judge. After reciting the appearance of the parties by their attorneys and the findings of the court, the journal entry contained the following:
"The injunction applied for in this case will be denied and the purchase of said plant by the city of Stafford to the amount of $11,800 will be approved, but the sum of $2,200 paid for the surrender of the so-called exclusive franchise and good will is not approved, and the judgment of $1,205.33, or any portion of it, out of the city light fund, to pay the engineer for estimating the cost of the Larabee Flour Mills Company plant, is not approved, and it is ordered and adjudged by the court that the defendants restore to the electric light fund the sum of $2,200 paid for the good will and surrender of the Larabee Flour Mill franchise and any sum paid out of the said electric light fund to the expert engineer for his report, and judgment against the defendants for costs, to which order, judgment, and decree of the court the defendants and each of them and all of them except, and exceptions allowed."
On the 1st day of April, 1915, after the decision of this court on the former appeal had been rendered, and the mandate recorded in the district court, a corrected journal entry was filed by order of the court. This journal entry, after reciting the appearance of the parties and the findings of the court, just as they were recited in the former journal entry, is as follows:
In May, 1915, the defendants filed a motion asking that the last journal entry be set aside and vacated, for the following reasons:
"First, because a journal entry of judgment, signed by the attorneys for plaintiff and defendants and approved by them, had already been filed in said cause, an appeal taken from the judgment embodied therein to the Supreme Court of the state of Kansas, by the Supreme Court affirmed, and the mandate of said Supreme Court spread upon the records of Stafford county, Kan.
Second, because the court had no authority and no jurisdiction to render a personal judgment against the defendants in the above-entitled cause, as set out in said journal entry filed April 1, 1915.
Third, because the court had no authority to change, modify, or alter the judgment previously rendered in said cause.
Fourth, because said journal entry filed April 1, 1915, has the effect of changing and modifying and altering the judgment heretofore rendered in said cause, and the court was without authority or jurisdiction to alter, amend, or modify the same."
This appeal is taken from the order overruling that motion.
1. The defendants contend that the court had no power to correct the journal entry of judgment in the manner in which it was corrected. This question is presented by the defendants from one point of view and by the plaintiff from another. The defendants argue that the court had no power to correct the journal entry of judgment so as to show a judgment different from that actually rendered on the trial. If a different judgment was rendered this argument is good, under Martindale v. Battey, 73 Kan. 92, 84 P. 527; Chapman v. Irrigation Co., 75 Kan. 765, 90 P. 284; and Eisenbise v. Eisenbise, 98 Kan. 108, 157 P. 416. The plaintiff contends that the court had the right to correct the journal entry so as to make it record the judgment that was actually rendered. It is therefore necessary to determine what the court did. This can best be done by referring to the language of the written opinion filed when the journal entry was corrected. The trial court there said:
This language shows that what the court did was to make the journal entry recite the judgment rendered at the time of the trial. There is no question about the power of the court to correct the journal entry so as to make it speak the truth and set out the judgment that was rendered, even though the judgment as first recorded had been before the Supreme Court for review. Investment Co. v. Walsh, 70 Kan. 899, 79 P. 688. In Christisen v. Bartlett, 73 Kan. 401, 84 P. 530, 85 P. 594, this court said:
"A district court has the power to correct the entry of a judgment, so as to cause it to speak the truth, after the expiration of the term at which it was rendered, and upon the personal knowledge of the judge of what took place in court at the time of its...
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