11 S.E.2d 472 | N.C. | 1940
Action to recover upon an account for goods sold and delivered. Plaintiff entered into contract with defendant Johnson whereby the latter agreed to sell merchandise manufactured by plaintiff, and to account for same under a consignment agreement, and the defendants McIver, Neal and Holmes executed obligation to indemnify and save harmless the plaintiff for any loss sustained on account of merchandise delivered to Johnson under the contract.
Thereafter plaintiff instituted this action against Johnson as principal, and McIver, Neal and Holmes as sureties, to recover for goods delivered to Johnson under the contract and not accounted for, alleging fraudulent misapplication on the part of Johnson. Johnson had left the State and was not served with summons. The other defendants were duly served. No answer was filed by any of the defendants, and thereupon judgment by default final for the sum of $367.83 was rendered by the clerk against defendants McIver, Neal and Holmes, on 8 January, 1940.
On 16 April, 1940, answer of defendant Johnson was filed in the office of the clerk, and at same time motion to set aside the judgment by default final was made by defendant McIver. At the hearing by the clerk the answer of defendant Johnson was ordered stricken from the record and the motion of defendant McIver was denied.
Upon exception and appeal to the Superior Court, the orders of the clerk were affirmed, the judge holding that the answer was not filed by leave of the court or by consent, and that the motion of defendant McIver to set aside the judgment of the clerk failed to show a meritorious defense. Defendants Johnson and McIver appealed to this Court.
It is apparent that the judgment by default final was improvidently entered. It was irregular. Under the allegations of the complaint, plaintiff was entitled only to a judgment by default and inquiry. C. S., 595, 596; Byerly v. Acceptance Corp.,
However, upon the motion to set aside the judgment on the ground of irregularity, it was incumbent upon the defendants to show a meritorious defense. Cayton v. Clark,
We think the court erred in denying the motion to set aside the judgment by default final under the circumstances disclosed by the record. It would seem also that defendant Johnson, against whom suit had been instituted for fraud, and upon whom no service of summons had been had, should be permitted to enter voluntary appearance and file answer in denial of the matters alleged against him. Dodd v. Reese, 128 A.L.R., 574. This appears to have been the view of plaintiff's counsel when he wrote defendants' counsel, "The plaintiff does not contest the right of Mr. Johnson to file his answer in the matter."
We conclude that the judge below erred in his ruling on the motion, and that the judgment must be reversed. This disposition of the appeal renders unnecessary the consideration of defendants' motion in this Court based upon newly discovered evidence.
*503Judgment reversed.