delivered the opinion of the court.
The object of the action, as stated by the plaintiffs in the prayer of the complaint, was to enjoin Ellen Hatch, one of the defendants, from demanding or receiving, and her co-defendant, the sheriff of Bio Grande county, from issuing to her, a sheriff’s deed to certain real property of plaintiff’s described in a sheriff’s certificate of sale which had been given to her, and which she held — the time for *424redemption having expired — upon the ground that the judgment under which the execution was issued .and the sale made was void; and that such acts of defendants, if consummated, would constitute a cloud on their title.
The transcript and, necessarily, the abstract are so unsatisfactory and apparently so incomplete that it is difficult to. ascertain from either or both the merits of the controversy, or just what occurred at the trial. It does not appear from any recital therein, or certificate of the judge thereto attached, that the bill of exceptions contains all of the evidence upon which the judgment was rendered, and this pre: vents us from passing upon the alleged insufficiency of the evidence to sustain it. A strict enforcement of our practice would preclude us from considering the other principal errors assigned. While we might summarily dismiss the writ of error, we have given to plaintiff in error the benefit of everything that the most liberal rules permit in behalf of the record which he has filed here, for it discloses reasons other than those of a technical nature for dismissing the writ.
There may be some doubt as to whether the jurisdiction of this court is invoked if we look alone to the provisions of tho decree assailed, but inasmuch as the conclusion reached calls for a dismissal of the writ of error, we may proceed upon, the assumption that the cause is properly here.
The principal point made by plaintiff in error is that since the action in which the judgment was rendered, and upon which the sheriff’s sale was made, and his certificate of sale issued, was brought against the defendants therein named as members of a co-partnership, and the claims upon which the action was founded was a partnership debt, and only three of the four members of the firm were served with *425summons and the judgment was rendered against those served as individuals, and not in their partnership capacity, or against the firm itself; and since none of the defendants answered, the judgment was not merely erroneous, hut, under the doctrine of Russell v. Shurtleff, 28 Colo., 414, void, and might be impeached even collaterally.
The complaint in this action alleges, among other things, that Ellen Hatch, the judgment creditor who holds the certificate of sale, will demand, and the sheriff of the county will issue, a sheriff’s deed for the property of plaintiffs which will result in clouding their title, unless the court interferes to prevent it. Whether, if that be true, a cloud upon the title would be created before recording of the deed, as to which the complaint is silent, we need not now determine.
The decree of which complaint is now made, after reciting that the issues are found in favor of John C. Young, one of the plaintiffs, and against Robert Young, the other plaintiff, orders that Ellen Hatch be perpetually restrained and enjoined from requesting or demanding, and the sheriff and his successors in office be perpetually restrained and enjoined from issuing to Ellen Hatch or any other, person, any sheriff’s deed or other conveyance, conveying, or pretending to convey, any of the property of John C. Young, one of the plaintiffs. There is no order whatever either dismissing the action'.as to Robert Young, or ordering the sheriff to issue, or not to issue, a sheriff’s deed conveying any of his property. It does not appear that any judgment was, as a matter of fact, rendered or entered against Robert Young, plaintiff in error, here, upon the; finding of issues against him.
Why no judgment was rendered against Robert, after the court found the facts against him, we *426do not know. It may be significant in this connection, however, that during the progress of the trial the court observed that, “There is a judgment” (meaning the one alleged to be void), “against Eobert Young, which is not vacated and which the court cannot vacate in this case as now presented, and that the court cannot restrain the sheriff from making a deed to any property of Eobert Young, which has been sold to satisfy this judgment against him;” to. which Eobert’s attorney replied, “If our complaint is not sufficient we ask leave to amend it;” and.to this the court rejoined, “So far as the court is advised at this time the judgment will simply be to restrain the conveyance of any of John Cl Young’s property. ” In response to an inquiry of counsel what would be the judgment as to Eobert, the court said: “I don’t think I can set aside that judgment as to Eobert Young upon anything that is now before the court.”
The most that can be said is that as the judge was then advised, either because of lack of proof, or because the complaint was not sufficient, he thought he could not set aside the judgment, as to Eobert. If that was his actual and final conclusion, this record does not show it, and there is no-proof that any such judgment was rendered or entered and the transcript does not purport to- contain any certificate or statement that any such was pronounced. It shows that John C. secured a decree in his favor, but, so far as we are advised, the trial court may still have under consideration the cause as to Eobert. A finding by the court of the facts against Eobert has no greater efficacy than a verdict of a jury. To neither would a writ of error lie, until after judgment was entered upon it, and that has not been done.
But if there was a judgment here against Eobert, we could not disturb, it. The cause of action set up in the complaint is a joint oné against the *427judgment creditor and the sheriff. It was their joint threatened acts which constituted the grievance complained of. The act of the creditor alone certainly could hot injuriously affect the plaintiffs, and unless the sheriff issued the deed no harm could result to them. In his separate answer filed in this cause, the sheriff says, and his answer stands admitted, that before this action was started, he was present in the district court at the time that tribunal vacated the alleged void judgment as to John C. Young, one of the defendants in the original action, and one of the plaintiffs in this action, and because of that order, he refused, and still refuses, to issue any deed, either for Eobert’s or John C. Young’s property to the holder of the certificate of sale which was issued by him under the alleged void judgment, and he alleges that, as such sheriff, believing it to be his duty to do so, he will continue to refuse to issue the deed unless ordered by the court to issue the same. The complaint would not state a cause of action in the absence of an averment that such action of the sheriff was threatened, and if the proof in its support was lacldng, no cause of action would be established, and no relief could be awarded. If, therefore, it appeared to the trial court, as it certainly did from .this record, that the sheriff did not intend to, and would not, issue or deliver the deed, the cause of action which was alleged was not proved, and that was an end to the case.
As the writ of error must be dismissed for these reasons, we need not investigate the question as to the validity of the alleged void judgment, or discuss the numerous questions raised by defendants in error and which have been elaborately argued by both counsel.
The writ of error should be dismissed and it is so ordered.
Writ of error dismissed.