Schautz v. Kearney
Schautz v. Kearney
Opinion of the Court
The opinion of the court was delivered by
The power of the court to order one judgment to be set off against another, where the judgment sought to be set off may be enforced against the person recovering the judgment to be set off, is an exercise of the equitable jurisdiction of the court, and will be administered in all cases where a set-off would be equitable, and upon such equitable terms as will promote substantial justice. Brown ads. Hendrickson, 10 Vroom 239 ; McAdams v. Randolph, 13 Vroom 332 ; Terney v. Wilson, 16 Vroom 283. The damages awarded to Mrs. Kearney in the District Court, and the damages recovered against her by Schautz in this court, being damages recovered in the two courts against the parties respectively, for breaches by them respectively of the same oontract, there is, in the nature of these counter-claims, an obvious equity that the one should be set off against the other.
The plaintiff contends that the defendant’s decree, being in a federal court, over whose decrees and whose officers and process this court has no control, this is not a case in which this court could exercise its equitable jurisdiction in making the set-off; that this court, not having the ability to protect the plaintiff from the enforcement of the defendant’s decree against him in the future, it would be inequitable to allow it to be used to pay and satisfy the plaintiff’s judgment.
The set-off of one judgment against another, when ordered by the court, is ordinarily enforced by virtue of the control
The court might refuse to make the set-off when the defendant’s judgment is in a federal court or in the court of another state, for the right'is an equitable and not a legal right, and would refuse to allow the set-off if we saw any-ground for a belief that the judgment creditor in this court would be prejudiced in the use that might afterwards be made of the judgment against him. In this case the defendant’s
The order to set off will not touch the taxed costs. They belong to the attorney. Brown ads. Hendrickson, supra. The $75 paid into court with the pica of tender belongs to the plaintiff. He may take this money out, applying the same, first, to the payment of the taxed costs, and the balance as a credit upon his judgment for damages.
A rule allowing the set-off will be allowed on the defendant’s executing a release of so much of her decree in the District Court as will be sufficient to pay the balance of the plaintiff’s judgment after the $75 is applied upon it, as above indicated, and filing a stipulation that there shall be a credit given accordingly on said decree. There should be no costs allowed on this application to either party.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.