By the Court,
Hawley, C. J.:This action was instituted by appellant to enjoin the sale of certain property purchased by it from J. Ginaca and A. Gintz, which the respondent Nash, as sheriff, was proceeding to sell under and by virtue of a writ of execution, issued upon a judgment obtained by respondents, Terry, Friend and Doane, against said Ginaca and Gintz, prior to the sale of the property to appellant, upon the ground that said respondents had no valid judgment against said Ginaca and Gintz.
Bespondents interposed a demurrer to the complaint, upon the ground that it did not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action. The court sustained the demurrer, and gave judgment in favor of respondents for their costs.
*2411. The judgment obtained against Ginaea and Gintz was a judgment by confession. It is admitted that the statement and affidavit of confession, authorizing the entry of judgment, conform in every respect to the provisions of section 360 of the civil practice act. (1 Comp. L. 1421.)
The clerk copied the statement and affidavit in the judgment book, and added these words: “Judgment entered, April 14, A. D. 1874. Attest J. H. Job, clerk,” and indorsed the same on the back of the statement. Appellant contends that this is not a judgment. The statute which authorizes a judgment by confession to be entered without action, and requires a statement in Avriting to be made, signed by the defendant and verified by his oath, declares that: “The statement shall be filed with the clerk of the court in which the judgment is to be entered, who shall indorse upon it and enter in the judgment book a judgment of such court for the amount confessed, with ten dollars costs. The judgment and affidavit, with the judgment indorsed, shall thereupon become the judgment roll.”' (1 Comp. L. 1422.)
It is the usual practice of clerks in entering the judgment to refer to the statement and affidavit, and then to use the formal words: It is, therefore, by reason of the law and the premises considered that said plaintiff * * do have and recover of and from said defendant * * the said sum of * * etc., and such a practice ought, for obvious reasons, to be encouraged and commended. There is, however, no special form absolutely necessary. The sufficiency of the writing claimed to be a judgment should always be tested by its substance rather than its form. “If it appears to have been intended by some competent tribunal as the determination of the rights of the parties to an action, and shows in intelligible language the relief granted, its claim to confidence will not be lessened, by a Avant of technical form, nor by the absence of language commonly deemed especially appropriate to formal judicial records. The entry of a judgment, like every other composition, should be comprised of those words Avhich Avill express the idea intended to be conveyed Avith the utmost accuracy. It should also be a model of brevity, and should contain no unnecessary directions.” (Freeman on Judgments, sec. 47.)
*242Applying these rules to this case, is not the statement and indorsement, as entered in the judgment book, a judgment? We think it is. It was evidently intended as a determination of the rights of the parties to the confession, and it, clearly shows, in intelligible language the relief granted. The statement is signed by Ginaca &. Gintz, and concisely states the facts out of which the indebtedness, from them to Terry, Friend, and Doan, arose; the amount of such indebtedness; and the fact that they had executed and delivered to said parties a promissory note for said amount, a copy of which is set out in the statement. It then authorizes “the entry of judgment on said note against us and in favor of W. E. Terry, John A. Friend, and L. E. Doan, in the sum of four thousand six hundred and fifty ($4,650) dollars in United States gold coin, and that said judgment draw interest from date until paid at the rate of one and one-half (1J) per cent, per month, payable in like gold coin.”
We are of the opinion that the legal effect of the entry and indorsement made by the clerk is .the- same as if the clerk had indorsed on the back of the statement, and entered in the judgment book, a formal judgment in strict compliance with the provisions of the statute. In proceedings under the statute, authorizing a judgment by confession, there is no suit, no recovery or adjudication. (Blydenburg v. Northrop, 13 How. Pr. 290.) Thp statute expressly authorizes the clerk to enter the judgment. The clerk is not invested with any judicial functions. “He cannot call the parties before him and adjudicate or pass upon their rights.” (Hempstead v. Drummond, 1 Wis. 536.) His duties are purely ministerial. He has nothing to consider, order, adjudge or decree. It is his duty to enter a judgment; and he can only enter such a judgment as the parties themselves have expressly authorized by their statement. In judgments by confession, as in judgments by default: “The statute directs the judgment. The clerk acts as the agent of the statute, in writing out and filing its judgment among the records of the court.” (Freeman on Judgments, sec. 129.) The form of the judgment is not material. If it contains *243the substance required by law, it is sufficient. (Stowers v. Milledge et al. 1 Iowa, 150; Barrett v. Garragan, 16 Iowa, 48.)
At common law, judgments are defined as “the sentence of the law, pronounced by the court upon the matter contained in the record.” (3 Blackstone Com. 395.) Our statute gives the following definition: “A judgment is the final determination of the rights of the parties in the action or proceeding.” (1 Comp. L. 1208.) For further definitions, see Perkins v. Sierra Nevada S. M. Co., (10 Nev. 411,) and the authorities there cited.
The judgment must accord with, and be warranted by the pleadings. ' The facts need not necessarily be recited in the judgment. (Hamilton v. Ward, 4 Tex. 360; Elliott v. Morgan, 3 Harrington, Del. 316; Shepard v. McNeil, 38 Cal. 73.) The reasons announced by the court to sustain its decision, and the award of execution often contained in the record, constitute no part of the judgment, (Freeman on Judgments, sec. 2) which should always be but a simple sentence of the law upon the ultimate facts admitted by the pleadings or found by the court. (Gregory v. Nelson, 41 Cal. 282.) The statute does not prescribe any form for the entry of a judgment. It simply provides that: ‘ ‘ The clerk shall keep among the records of the court a book for the entry of judgments, to be called the “judgment book,” in which each judgment shall be entered, and shall specify clearly the relief granted, or other determination of the action.” (1 Comp. L.1264.)
In Ordinary v. McClure, Johnson, J., in delivering the opinion of the court, said:' “In the absence of any statutory or other positive regulation, each department of the judiciary must be left to adopt and pursue its own formula in its proceedings, because neither of them has the power to prescribe in these matters for the others. With respect to matters of substance, there are certain requisites however, which equally apply to every jurisdiction, and without which legal proceedings would be useless and unnecessary. In addition to the ordinary circumstances of time and place, they should, for the most obvious reasons, exhibit the parties, the subject-matter in dispute, and the result. These *244facts being ascertained, the legal consequences follow of course, whatever may be the phraseology used.” (1 Bailey, S. Car. Law., 8.) This case, and the general principle it enunciates, has been frequently quoted with approval.
Freeman, in his work on judgments, after mentioning the fact that the authorities are not altogether consistent, says: “I think, however, that from the cases, this general statement may be safely made: That whatever appears upon its face to be intended as the entry of a judgment, will be regarded as sufficiently formal if it show: First. The relief granted; and, Second. That the grant was made by the court in whose records the entry is written. In specifying the relief granted, the parties of whom and for whom it is given, must, of course, be sufficiently identified.” (Sec. 50.)
In the case under consideration the authority to enter the judgment is derived from the statute and the statement, and we are of opinion that the statement, the indorsement, and entry of the clerk, with sufficient certainty exhibits tho parties, the subject-matter, and the result. It substantially complies with the provisions of the statute in specifying clearly “the relief granted,” and in intelligible language gives the “determination of the action.”. The judgment is 'entered in accordance with the recitals in the statement of confession. The words judgment entered must be considered in connection with said statement. What judgment then is entered? Is it not the one authorized by the statement? The only reasonable, fair and legal construction to be given to the entries, as made by the clerk in the judgment book, is that the judgment entered is in favor of the plaintiffs, Terry, Friend and Doan, and against the defendant, Ginaca & Gintz, for the sum of $4650, with interest thereon at the rate of one per cent, per month. This is the only judgment that is authorized by the statement, and it is the legitimate conclusion that naturally and regularly follows from the premises of law and fact. The entry is a final determination of the rights of the parties, and would be a bar to any suit that might be brought upon the promissory note or indebtedness mentioned in the statement of confession. (Johnson v. *245Gillett, 52 Ill. 360; Fetter v. Mulliner, 2 John. 181; Gaines v. Betts, 2 Doug., Mich. 100; Lynch v. Kelley, 41 Cal. 232.)
There usually is, and ought always to be, sufficient personal pride to induce the clerks of the district courts to keep their records in some regular and appropriate manner; but courts have seldom held, and, in our opinion, ought never to hold, that a slight departure from the established and approved form of entering an order or judgment would invalidate all subsequent proceedings, when upon the face of the entry made by the clerk, the substance of the order, or judgment, is clearly manifest. While it is true that the language of the judgment in this case is not in harmony with the approved forms in general use, and is not such as purely technical rules require, nor such as clerks skilled in their duties would be apt to use; yet we are of the opinion that upon the reason and justice of the law, as well as the rules established by decided cases, the essential attributes, the substance of a judgment exists, and that the record, as made by the clerk, must be considered and treated as a valid judgment.
The clerk having made the proper entries of the judgment under the appropriate heads in the docket kept by him, the judgment became, and was, a valid lien upon the property purchased by appellant (1 Comp. L., 1267), and the sheriff was authorized to sell the same under and by virtue of the writ of execution issued upon said judgment.
The judgment of the district court is affirmed.