Little v. Atchison, Topeka & Sante Fe R'y Co.

Gill, J.

The court will first direct its attention to the motion of appellees to dismiss the appeal herein.

*702The first ground presented for the dismissal of the appeal is because the order quashing the execution herein is not such a final judgment as will support an appeal to this court. The only question that seems to have been before the district court was the question as to whether or not the United States commissioner erred in ordering a recall of the execution issued on the judgment in that court, and in quashing it; and said district court finally disposed of the question that was then before it, in the sense of the law, by sustaining the motion to recall and quash the execution, and this certainly was a final order, so far as said case was before said district court, and, as such, was appealable.-

The second reason advanced for a dismissal of the appeal is because no motion for a new trial was ever filed, presenting the errors complained of to the trial court. There having been no trial nor issuable matter before said district court, it was unnecessary, in the opinion of this court) that a motion for a new trial be filed; 'and the case, or what there is of the case, is properly before this court on the record made.

We do not think the third reason assigned for the dismissal of the appeal is good, because the bill of exceptions presents the exact question that was decided by the court below. Therefore the court refuses to dismiss the appeal for the reason assigned.

The peculiarities presented by the record in this case are such as to bonfound the judicial mind. The commissioner’s court can only do those things authorized by the statute, and must do whatever it is authorized to do in the statutory manner. In this case, the plaintiffs (appellants herein) prosecuted an action to judgment in the commissioner’s court, and in said action the record shows a general appearance to have been made by said defendants (appellees herein). Said action went to judgment in said commissioner’s court. From this judgment the defendants (appellees herein) had the right of appeal. They failed to exercise their right, and, nearly a year after the entry *703of judgment, execution, issued thereon. The right of appeal had gone by, The commissioner was without further jurisdiction in said cause, other than to issue and collect, if possible, said execution on said judgment. The said commissioner had no other jurisdiction in said case, except control over its execution. The defendants (appellees herein) undertook to reopen said case, and retry the right of the commissioner to give judgment, and said commissioner undertakes to pronounce upon his own judgment in his own court that said judgment is void and of no effect. This question might have been tested at the proper time and in the proper manner by the defendants (appellees herein) had they so chosen. But instead of testing this matter in the proper forum, they proceed, outside of the statute, to test the question in a forum without jurisdiction. The commissioner, as before suggested, could proceed only in the methods prescribed by the statute; and, after a full investigation of the statute in this case, in reference to the issuance and control of executions by the United States commissioners, this court is unable to perceive in what way or by what authority or right the said commissioner could pass upon and decide whether or not the judgment in bis court was void. Under section 4103 Mansf. Dig. (§ 2783, Ind. Ter. St. 1899), the Supreme Court of Arkansas, in Scanlan vs Mixer, 31 Ark. 354, holds: “A justice of the peace has control of an improper or improvident execution issued by him, and may revoke and quash it.” And so far as the action of the justice was concerned, it was within his power to revoke and quash the execution in this case, if the same was improper or improvident. But we do not see how the commissioner, acting as justice of the peace, could, in this case, have reviewed its own judgment, or set the same aside, or held that there should not be a proper execution issued ■thereon. The judgment of the commissioner recalling the execution and quashing the same is as follows: Comes on now the motion of defendants, heretofore submitted, to quash the exe*704cution herein, and the court, being well and sufficiently advised in the premises, doth in all things sustain said motion. To which action of the court plaintiffs, then and there, in open-court, duly excepted, and their exceptions were allowed.” The motion to recall and quash the execution is based upon three several resaons: “First, because said execution was issued contrary to law, and because no valid judgment was ever obtained against these defendants in this action; second, because the pretended judgment on which said, execution was issued was rendered and entered by the court without any authority, whatever, or without any evidence before the court to justify or authorize the rendition of said judgment; and, third, because the pretended judgment against Martin Wollman was null and void, for many reasons set out in said motion. Wherefore these defendants pray that upon giving security in such sum as the law requires, and upon notice of this application being served upon the plaintiffs or their attorneys, that said execution be stayed, and that on final hearing said execution be quashed and held for naught, and the judgment upon which the same be issued be adjudged to be a nullity, and that the defendants have all the relief to which they may be entitled.” As heretofore, intimated, under the statute a justice of the peace would have no right whatever to review or pass upon a judgment'recovered in his court. He would have the right, under the law, of recalling and quashing an execution that had been issued improperly or improvidently. Whether the execution in this case was 1 issued improperly or improvidently was a question that the commissioner had the right to determine, and neither the district court nor this court would have any control whatever of the commissioner in the recalling and quashing the execution if the same was issued contrary to law. But the commissioner did not find that the execution in this case was improperly or improvidently issued. Instead, he found that the motion of defendants to quash the execution herein should be sustained *705for the reasons named in the motion, namely, that there was no valid judgment, that the pretended judgment was rendered and entered without authority, and that such pretended judgment was null and void In other words, the commissioner undertook, upon the motion of appellees, to investigate his own. records, and review the same, and to reverse the same and hold the same as null and void. Thishe could not do. The only court which: could review and hold such judgment'to be null añd void, after the judgment had been once entered by the commissioner, was the higher court, upon appeal. And such being the case, the decision of the trial court herein, rendering judgment for defendants (appellees), must be .reversed, and the action of the lower court and of the commissioner in sustaining the motion to quash the execution held to be a nullity and without avail. The parties herein.are relegated to the position each stood with reference to the ease before the attempted quashing of the execution by the commissioner. Reversed.

Clayton and Raymond, JJ., concur.