11 App. D.C. 23 | D.C. Cir. | 1897
delivered the opinion of the Court:
The affidavits filed by the garnishee in the court below on August 27, 1896, are not made part of the record in any way to require consideration from us, and must therefore be disregarded on this appeal. They are not noticed by the court below either in its judgment or otherwise; and
That question is, whether in proceedings in attachment or garnishment by way of execution, when the answer of the garnishee to the interrogatories and writ served upon him has not been filed within the time limited by the statute or by the rules made-in pursuance of the statute, such answer can validly be filed at any time afterwards before proceedings are had upon the default, and should thereupon, even though no consent of court has been sought or had for its filing, be considered by the court as though it had been filed in due time. This question we find ourselves compelled to determine very differently from the court below.
That pleadings should be filed in due time; that all proceedings required to be had in court should be taken in proper season; that rules of practice limiting time should be enforced with reasonable strictness, and that excuses for the neglect or disregard of such rules should not be lightly entertained, is the demand of good order and of justice, for the proper administration of which such limitations have been prescribed. For without such limitations the due administration of justice would become impossible; and without the enforcement of such limitations only disorder and confusion would result, and the authority of the courts would fall into contempt.
Some of these limitations are of a jurisdictional character—such as the statute of limitations itself in some cases, the provisions for taking appeals, the rules regarding motions for new trials and in arrest of judgment, and other regulations, whether prescribed directly by statute, or by rules of court having the force of statutory provision, which might readily be cited; and when they are of such a character, they are a law unto the courts themselves as well as to litigants, and may not be disregarded in special cases even for assumed hardship—although, of course, there are cases where parties may be estopped by their own conduct or
But where causes are pending in a court undetermined, and especially where a proceeding is in its nature a matter of absolute right, such as pleadings usually are, apart from the limitations by which it is required that they should be guarded, it has never yet been heard, either under the common law in England, or in the State of Maryland, from which we have derived our practice, or in the District of Columbia itself during the period of nearly one hundred years of its separate judicial existence, that parties may not waive limitations of time either by their express consent or by implication, through failure to take advantage of default.
This position does not seem to bo controverted by the appellee; although the argument on his behalf would tend to question its correctness. The contention seems to be that there is something exceptional in the law of garnishment or in the rules of court relating thereto that precludes the application to it of the well established practice in other cases. .It is argued that, although an answer in equity or a plea at common law may be properly filed, even without leave of the court, at any time after the rule day for filing such answer or plea, yet an answer to interrogatories propounded with a writ of garnishment may not be so filed, whether default has been taken or not, and whether leave of the court has or has not been asked.
We fail to find anything exceptional in the law of garnishment or in the rules of court made in pursuance of it and to give it effect, that would warrant this contention. Nor do we find anything in the authorities cited on behalf of the appellee that would have that effect in opposition to the well established practice in this District in all such cases.
Attachments by way of execution upon judgments were authorized in Maryland by the act of Assembly of that State of 1715, Ch. 40, Sec. 7. The provision of that act is that, if the garnishee does not show cause to the contrary on the
These acts are in force in the District of Columbia, and they are the acts under which the proceedings in the case before us have been sought to be had.
The act of 1795, it will be noticed, contemplates the formulation of a rule of court for its enforcement; and the rule for that purpose promulgated by the Supreme Court of the District of Columbia, and in force at the time at which these proceedings were instituted, and at the present time, is the following:
“The plaintiff, upon issuing such writ of attachment (attachment on judgment), may exhibit interrogatories to be answered by the garnishee within ten days after the service of the same upon him; and upon his failure to answer, judgment may be entered against him at any time after the twentieth day, exclusive of Sundays and legal holidays, oc
“ If by the answer of the garnishee, or by the verdict of a jury, it shall appear that he has property of the defendant, judgment of condemnation of said property or credits shall be entered, but not for an amount in excess of the original judgment and the costs, and execution shall issue thereon.”
These statutes and the rule of court made in pursuance of them, are no more mandatory or imperative than other similar rules and statutes which have been invariably held to be merely authoritative, and not imperative, except at the option of the party seeking the exercise of the authority and entitled to have it exercised in his favor. The ordinary rules for the regulation of the time of pleading are couched in similar and even more imperative language, and have equally the sanction of statute for their formulation. And yet it has been, as we have stated, an unheard of thing in the courts of the District of Columbia, that parties in default as to the time of pleading might not plead freely and without leave except as to certain pleas regarded technically with disfavor, at any time thereafter until some action has been had against them to enforce such default. The invariable practice has been that, notwithstanding the lapse of time limited by the rules of court, pleas may be filed and should be received at any time, until default taken. And this practice, which is plainly in no way inconsistent with the purposes of justice, we regard as so well established that citation of authorities in support of it may be regarded as wholly unnecessary. But reference may be had to 1 Tidd’s Practice, 566; King v. Hicks, 32 Md. 460; Crabtree v. Green, 36 Ill. 279; Bowers v. Dickerson, 18 Cal. 420; Dole v. Young, 11 Johns. (N. Y.) 90; Boyd v. Canal Co., 17 Md. 195.
This is the rule and the practice at common law. Much more is it and should it be the rule and the practice of
It is no objection that the appellant did not obtain leave of court to answer the interrogatories. If the appellee’s contention that the statute and the rule are so imperative that the garnishee’s answer, if not filed within the specified time, could not be filed at all, were correct, application to the court would be useless, for the court would have no authority to extend the time, the statute and the rule both being silent on the subject. If, on the other hand, the statute and the rule are not thus imperative, there was no necessity to apply to the court, for there was nothing in the record to interpose any obstacle to the answer. Application to the court for leave to interpose some pleading or proceeding is proper only when the court has discretionary power to grant it, and when there is no imperative statute or rule of court to preclude its allowance; and it is necessary only where there has been already some pleading or proceeding by the party applicant inconsistent with that proposed by the application to be had; as, for instance, pleading over after a demurrer has been interposed and overruled; or when it is anticipated that the adverse party may proceed to enforce default in the absence of action by the court. The court in such cases does not move of its own accord; nor is there any peremptory requirement of law that it should do so. Only upon the application of an adverse party is default enforced under our practice, and it is always
It is argued, also, on behalf of the appellee, that a garnishee’s answer to interrogatories is evidence, not pleading, in favor of which position the case of Devries v. Buchanan, 10 Md. 210, is cited; and that, therefore, the practice applicable to pleadings does not apply to answers to interrogatories. We see no reason to question the correctness of the statement in the case of Devries v. Buchanan in the sense and in the connection in which it was made, but it does not support the conclusion sought to be drawn from it by the appellee. For it is not of the slightest consequence in this connection whether we designate an answer to interrogatories as a pleading or as a matter of evidence; it is in any event a proceeding in court for the introduction of which there is a limitation of time by a rule of court, and with reference to which no good reason has been or can be suggested that would distinguish it from any other proceedings so limited so far as to preclude a party in default from repairing his default at any time before action thereon is had against him, or to preclude the opposing party from waiving the default bj7 his inaction.
Opposed to the doctrine sustained by our practice are supposed to be certain decisions cited on behalf of the appellee from Georgia and Louisiana, and also from Iowa and Illinois. But these decisions wholly fail to sustain the appellee’s contention.
The case of Whiteside v. Tunstall, 17 Ill. 258, which is one of those cited in this connection, merely holds that default is an admission of indebtedness—a doctrine wThich no one controverts. The case of Scamahorn v. Scott, 42 Iowa, 529, holds that a motion to set aside a judgment of default for failure to answer a writ of attachment must be made at the same term at which the default was taken. The case of Bearden v. Metropolitan Street R. Co., 82 Ga. 605, held that, when there was a wrrit of garnishment returnable to a certain term of court, and no answer to it was then filed, and another term several months afterwards supervened and there was even then no answer, and the plaintiff in the suit moved for judgment, and the court without cause refused to allow7 the motion or to enter judgment, and on the contrary gave the counsel for the garnishee, in the words of the record of the case, “further time to look into the matter,” and still no excuse was given for the delay in answering, but there w7as an answer afterwards filed by the garnishee, and a motion to strike it out and to enter judgment w7as refused
Four cases from Louisiana are cited. One of these, the case of Foley v. Harrison, 5 La. Ann. 82, has no bearing whatever on the subject. In another, that of Sturges v. Kendall, 2 La. Ann. 565, it is held that the forbearance of a plaintiff to take judgment against the garnishee at the same time that he takes it against the principal defendant, is no bar to his taking judgment subsequently against the garnishee. In the case of Henry v. Bryce, 11 La. Ann. 691, it is held that if a married woman does not answer interrogatories within the time limited, default may be taken against her, notwithstanding her disability of coverture. And in the fourth and last case cited, that of Warren v. Copp, 48 La. Ann., cited from 19 Southern Reporter, p. 746, it was held that where a garnishee was negligent in answering interrogatories, the negligence of a messenger being imputed to him, and permitted judgment to be entered against him, he could obtain no relief from the judgment.
It is difficult to see how any of these decisions can be construed to support the contention of the appellee. Of course, after judgment entered, or default taken, or even proceed
Reference is also made to the case of McPhaul v. Lapsley, 20 Wall. 264 (cited as 87 U. S.), which arose under the laws of the State of Texas. In those laws was the following provision: “Every instrument in writing (properly recorded) shall be admitted as evidence without the necessity of proving its execution, provided that the party who wishes to give it in evidence shall file the same among the papers of the suit three days before the trial and give notice to the opposite party of such filing, and unless such opposite party, or some other person for him, shall within one day after such notice file an affidavit stating that he believes such instrument to be forged.” In the case cited an affidavit had been filed, not within one day after notice given, but about twenty days afterwards, while the trial was in progress, and had been filed on behalf of a stranger to the record; and it was held that it was proper wholly to disregard such affidavit. That decision has no bearing on the case before us. The statute was a specific provision intended to facilitate the introduction of evidence; and to allow a departui’e from its terms, which would have the effect of operating as a surprise upon the opposing party, would be contrary to the elementary principles of justice.
We have thus carefully examined the authorities cited in behalf of the appellee in this case, for the reason that the judgment entered against the garnishee in the court below is a radical departure from the practice heretofore prevalent
From what we have said it follows that the oi;der, judgment, or decree appealed from, whichever it be regarded, must be, and it is hereby, reversed, with costs. The cause will be remanded to the Supreme Court of the District of Columbia with directions to vacate such, order, judgment, or decree, and to overrule the complainant’s motion for judgment, and for such fwrther proceedings in the premises according to law as may not be inconsistent with this opinion. And it is so ordered.