Judges: Brieh, Brunt
Filed Date: 3/16/1894
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/12/2024
This action was begun to recover for the sale and delivery of certain merchandise alleged to have been delivered by the plaintiff to the defendants’ testator at an agreed price, and which merchandise the defendants’ testator agreed to manufacture, and pay to the plaintiff one-half of the net profits of the sale thereof; and judgment was prayed for the amount claimed as the purchase price, and for an accounting as to the profits upon the sale thereof. After a trial, the court found a contract between the plaintiff and the defendants’ testator by which the plaintiff agreed to purchase certain carloads of cauliflower, and ship them to the defendant, which the defendant was to manufacture, and sell, after such manufacture, in the market; and that the defendant was to reimburse himself for any expenses which he might have incurred, and then reimburse the plaintiff, out of the balance of the proceeds of sale, for the price to be paid for the cauliflowers, and then the profits arising from the adventure were to be equally divided between the plaintiff and the defendant. The court further found that the enterprise proved a failure, and that- there were no profits therefrom to be divided between the parties thereto, and, as a conclusion of law, that the plaintiff had established no cause of action against the defendant, and that the defendant was entitled to judgment against the plaintiff, dismissing the complaint, with costs, and judgment was ordered accordingly. On the first Monday of March, 1890, a judgment was duly entered- upon said decision,
The appeal brings before us the regularity of the order entered on the 10th of April, 1891, amending the judgment entered on the first Monday of March, 1890, and of the judgment entered' upon the referee’s report made pursuant to said amended order. In the disposition of this appeal it is not necessary to consider any of the questions raised by the appeal from the judgment, for the reason that we are of opinion that the alleged amendment of the judgment was erroneous, and conferred no jurisdiction whatever upon the referee to proceed in the action. The cause had been tried, and findings of fact made that there were no profits arising from the enterprise, and, as a conclusion of law necessarily following from such findings of fact, that the plaintiff had established no cause of action against the defendant, and that the defendant was entitled to judgment against the plaintiff, dismissing the complaint, with costs. Such a judgment had been entered, and, so long as that judgment existed, there was certainly nothing- further which could be done in the fiction, with a complaint dismissed by a competent judg: ment; the plaintiff certainly can have no recovery in such an action. Without considering the question as to whether the court could, or could not, have amended the judgment by vacating that which had already been entered, it is sufficient to say that, at least until the judgment dismissing the complaint was vacated, no other or different judgment could be rendered as against the defendants. It certainly would be an anomaly in a litigation to have a judgment dismissing a complaint, and at the same time granting relief to the plaintiff because of the cause of action alleged to have been set out in the complaint. This conclusion, which seems to us to be inevitable, makes it unnecessary to consider any of the questions raised by
FOLLETT, J., concurs.