Brown v. Philadelphia, Wilmington & Baltimore R.

9 F. 183 | U.S. Cir. Ct. | 1881

Bradford, D. J.

The facts in the case are as follows:

The plaintiff brought suit to the last June term of this court to recover damages for injuries suffered by him-by alighting from a train en route through this city and stopping temporarily to permit the passengers to obtain refreshment. The summons was properly issued and served upon the corporation defendant. Ho appearance was ever entered by defendant, and, upon August 2d last, the plaintiff filed his declaration and entered judgment by default for want of an appearance. At the present October term, on October 19th, the plaintiff obtained an order, in the nature of a writ of inquiry, for the ascertainment of the damages by a jury attending at this term.

Upon this state of facts the defendant moves to-day that the judgment be stricken off the record, and presents the affidavits before mentioned.

Section 914, Bev. St., requiring the practice, etc., in the United States courts, in cases other than equity and admiralty, to conform, as near as may be, to the practice, e.tc.', in like cases in the state courts of the states in which such United States court is held, the first. *185inquiry will be, what is the practice in this regard in the state courts of Delaware?

Eemombering the fact that common-law actions have been judicially tried and determined within the territory now defined by the limits of this state for a period of upwards of 200 years, and that it has been repeatedly held, by the highest courts of judicature within this state, that the common law of England, up to the time of the declaration of independence, is as much a part of our system of jurisprudence as it is that of Great Britain, it will be material to examine the decisions of the common-law courts of that country, and, ascertaining what they are, see how far the statute laws and practice of our own state have modified them, or affected their validity here.

The cases referred to by the defendant’s attorney, and running back to the time of William and Mary, all sustain the principle contended for, and recognize the propriety, right, and justice of permitting a judgment by default, be it never so regular, to be taken off if it shall appear to the court that the defendant has a meritorious, just, and legal ground of defence. Indeed, one of the authorities goes so far as to permit the judgment to be taken off, and the case to be tried on its merits, notwithstanding an acknowledgment by the defendant, at the time of the application, of gross carelessness and neglect on the part of the attorney in not entering an appearance. It thus appears that the ancient and uniform practice in England permitted the default to be taken off upon its appearing to the court that the defendant had a just and legal ground of defence. The American authorities cited go to the same point.

If, then, this was the established practice inherited from our English ancestors, and in vogue in our own state up to the time of American independence, to what extent has the statute of Delaware, relied upon by the plaintiff, modified or controverted it ? We cannot see that it does so. A careful inspection of the statute in question shows that it makes provisions for a defendant not served by process, and against whom a judgment by default has been entered. He may come in, and, upon making affidavit of the facts, the court must take off the default; but it is silent as to taking off defaults against defendants differently circumstanced. And, in the absence of any express statutory enactments as to other cases, the ancient practice must be held to prevail.

There being,no statute provision controverting the ancient practice, is there any modern practice of our state courts in antagonism with it. As we are informed, there is but one reported case, that of *186Pennington v. France, 2 Houston, 417, and this recognizes and affirms the ancient practice.

Without examining at any greater length into the matter, we may say that all doubt is removed by the certificate presented by the defendant’s attorney for the inspection of the court, and signed by all the state judges, declaring what is the practice in the state courts in this regard. This, although it has not the weight of a decision given by these eminent judges while on the bench, in a case duly argued by counsel, and maturely weighed by them in their official capacities, yet is of value as settling the question of practice upon this point in the courts of the state.

Upon an examination of the Delaware statute itself, and giving due weight to the declaration of the judges of the superior court as to the fact as to what the practice is in the superior courts of the state on this point, we have no hesitation in directing that the judgment be set aside, and the defendant let in to try his case upon its merits, upon his pleading an issuable plea, and paying the costs of the suit up to date.

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