90 P. 897 | Utah | 1907
This is an appeal from a judgment entered against Haycock, tbe appellant, by default, and tbe matters presented for review arise out of tbe proceedings prior to judgment and those subsequent thereto on tbe application to set aside tbe default and to vacate tbe judgment. Tbe facts, briefly stated, are as follows: Tbe summons was duly served on the appellant at Panguitch, Garfield county, Utah, on November 11, 1905, in an action of replevin commenced by respondent against appellant in said court. A complaint and affidavit in replevin in due form were also filed on the same day. Tbe service and return are regular in form and substance. By section 2939, Eev. St. 1898, a party served in tbe county where tbe action is lodged must appear and defend tbe action within twenty days after service of summons upon him. Tbe twenty days in this case expired on December 1, 1905. On'that day tbe attorney for appellant, through bis office clerk, served a demurrer on tbe attorney for respondent at Beaver*, in Beaver county, Utah, by delivering a copy to tbe wife of tbe attorney; be being absent from bis office and residence attending court at Panguitch, in Garfield county. Tbe distance from Panguitch to Beaver is about fifty miles, and communication between tbe -two places is by a stage or mail route, making trips Mondays, Wednesdays, and Fridays of each week. On tbe evening of December 1st appellant’s attorney deposited tbe original demurrer, with proof of service thereto attached, in tbe post office at Beaver, and tbe same arrived in Panguitch at the clerk’s office in tbe forenoon of December 4th following. On tbe 2d of that month tbe attorney for respondent, without actual knowledge of tbe service of _ tbe demurrer at bis residence, entered a default against appellant for a failure to plead in tbe action. On the 4th, when the demurrer reached tbe clerk’s office, respondent’s attorney was informed of tbe fact by tbe clerk, and tbe attorney objected to tbe filing thereof because it was out of time; and tbe clerk, in pursuance of tbs objection, did not place bis filing mark on tbe demlurrer, but lodged it with tbe papers in tbe case. Within a few days
It is contended by appellant that tbe default was irregularly entered, in tbat tbe service of tbe demurrer on tbe attorney for respondent in tbe manner stated was sufficient to prevent a default. Is tbis contention sound? To determine tbis question, we bave examined a large number of eases from other states, but, in view of tbe variant statutes and rales of court, tbe decided cases bave afforded, and can afford, but little aid in arriving at a correct solution under our statute upon tbe subject. We will therefore attempt a solution of tbe question in tbe light of what we deem a fair and reasonable construction of our own statutes regulating tbe practice in this respect. By section 2939, Kev. St. 1898, a. party to an action served with a summons within tbe county where tbe action is planted must appear in and defend tbe same within twenty days after service, or suffer judgment to be taken against him in accordance with the prayer of tbe complaint. Section 2999 provides tbat “all pleadings subsequent to tbe complaint must be filed with tbe clerk and copies thereof served upon tbe adverse party or bis attorney.” Section 3331 provides tbat service or notices or papers may be made on tbe attorney, or, if be is absent from both bis office and residence, by leaving tbe same at bis residence with some person of suitable age and discretion, or, if bis residence is unknown, then by depositing tbe same in tbe post office, directed to him. Section 3332 provides tbat in certain cases service may be made by mail, and section 3333 makes the service complete at tbe time of tbe deposit in the post office. It is further provided in the last section tbat if tbe act is to be performed by tbe person served within a given number of days after such service, and such person resides at a place other than tbe person serving tbe notice and where tbe notice is mailed, then tbe person served has one day for each twenty-five miles’ distance between tbe place of deposit and tbe place of bis residence to perform such act. It will be observed tbat these latter sec
This brings us to a more delicate, if not a more important, and, a.s we conceive, the main question in the case, namely: Should the default and judgment have been set aside by the district court upon the showing made by appellant? That the question whether a default and judgment should or should not be vacated is one to be passed on by the trial court, and that it rests within its sound discretion, has so often been declared to be the rule of practice that it has become elementary, and needs no citation of authorities. It is equally elementary that this discretion is to be applied to the facts as they appear in each case, and, in the exercise of this discretion, the .aim and object should be the promotion and furtherance of justice and the protection of the rights of all concerned. As has been well said, in all doubtful cases the general rule of courts is to incline towards granting relief from the
“The facts set out in appellant’s affidavit wholly fail to bring the case within the foregoing provision of the statute. (Rev. St. 1898, see. 3005.) On the contrary, they tend to show a deliberate intention on his part to abandon his defense and permit plaintiff to take judgment against him. He and his counsel were advised that the case would be called for trial on the day for which it was set, and he must have known that unless he appeared and made his defense, or obtained a continuance, a judgment in all probability would be rendered against him; but, instead of preparing and appearing for trial, he showed an indifference which is wholly inexcusable.”
That was a case, aa the Chief Justice says, iu which appeared a deliberate abandonment of the case. Not so in this case. Every act on the part of appellant and his attorney shows a desire to present a defense. Their failure to effectuate their intention was not “wholly inexcusable,” but to our minds, in view of all the circumstances, should absolve them from the consequences of the judgment rendered against appellant. While, as we have already stated, the mere difference of judgment between this court and the trial court may not be conclusive, still it raises a serious doubt, and in such a case a reasonable doubt is always resolved in favor of granting a trial upon the merits where none has been had. In view, therefore, that the trial court- stated the rule applicable to cases like the one at bar correctly in another part of his opinion, but referred to the Crosier Cm&, supra, as being a precedent for him to follow, we feel forced to the conclusion that the trial court did not exercise his prerogative in respect to the discretion vested in him as freely as he might have done in the absence of the decision in the Cro'sierCase. Moreover, as it seems to us, the trial court, inadvertently, no doubt, mis
The judgment is reversed, and the district court is directed to vacate the judgment, set aside the default, and permit the appellant to answer upon such reasonable terms in respect to costs as to the court may seem just, and to proceed with the case in accordance with law. Neither party to recover costs in this court.