242 P. 936 | Cal. | 1926
This appeal is from a judgment herein in favor of the plaintiff and against the defendant and appellant B.J. Dunn, and also from an order denying the said defendant's motion to set aside said judgment upon the *788 ground hereinafter to be stated. The action was one for money had and received and was commenced by the plaintiff on June 5, 1923, against all three of the defendants, doing business as copartners under the firm name and style of Dunn, Hurst Martin, who were all duly served with process. The defendants Hurst and Martin defaulted and their defaults were duly entered. The defendant Dunn answered on August 15, 1923. On December 12, 1923, the plaintiff moved the trial court to set the cause for trial and an order was accordingly made setting the cause for trial upon March 1, 1924, of the making of which order notice was duly given to the attorneys who were at that time the attorneys of record for said defendant Dunn. On the date so set for the trial of said cause it was continued for trial to the twenty-sixth day of August, 1924. On or about August 21, 1924, Mr. V.G. Skinner, one of the attorneys of record representing the defendant Dunn, called up Mr. Lackenbach, the attorney of record for the plaintiff, and requested a postponement of the trial, giving as the reason therefor the asserted fact that he and his associate, Mr. Lemberger, had been representing Mr. Dunn in a number of actions and that Dunn had failed to pay their fee for such services rendered and that he did not wish to try said case unless Dunn paid his said attorneys their fee. The request of Mr. Skinner was acceded to and accordingly Mr. Lackenbach appeared in court on the day set for trial and suggested a continuance of the cause, which request was granted and the cause continued to be reset. On or about September 15, 1924, counsel for plaintiff appeared in court with a request that the cause be reset for trial upon September 25, 1924, which request the court granted. On September 19, 1924, notice of the setting of the cause for trial upon September 25, 1924, at the hour of 2 P.M., was duly served upon said A.F. Lemberger and V.G. Skinner as attorneys of record for the defendant Dunn. On the evening of September 24, 1924, the said attorneys of record for defendant Dunn served a notice upon Mr. Lackenbach, the plaintiff's attorney of record, that they had resigned as attorneys of record for said defendant Dunn and on the following day filed a copy of said notice and of their said resignation with the clerk of said court. Upon September 25, 1924, at the time set for the trial of said cause, plaintiff's counsel, Mr. Lackenbach, appeared and upon the case *789 being called for trial stated substantially the foregoing facts to the court and further stated that the plaintiff, who was an indispensable witness in the case, was compelled to leave California for the east, where he was permanently to reside, and that he, therefore, insisted upon going on with the trial of the cause. Neither the defendant Dunn nor his counsel was present and the fact of the attempted resignation of his said counsel from the case was brought to the court's attention. The court proceeded with the trial of the cause, with the result that a judgment was presently rendered and entered in the plaintiff's favor. Thereafter, and on October 3, 1924, the defendant Dunn appeared in court by his then counsel, Frank J. Mahoney, and moved the court to set aside and recall its aforesaid judgment, offering in support of said motion the judgment-roll and papers in the case, including the said notice of resignation of said defendant's former attorney of record theretofore filed. Upon this showing Mr. Mahoney stated the contention of himself and his client to be that the court was without jurisdiction to render said judgment at the time the same was rendered and entered by virtue of the provisions of section 286 of the Code of Civil Procedure. It was thereupon conceded by plaintiff's counsel that no such notice as is provided for in said section of the code had been given. In response to said motion plaintiff's counsel presented his own affidavit setting forth substantially the facts with relation to the several settings of said cause for trial and the continuances thereof for various reasons as hereinabove set forth, and also stating the facts relating to his client's compulsory departure from the state of California, which had induced his insistence upon the trial of said cause upon the date last set therefor. It further appeared upon said hearing that the defendant Dunn had been notified on the day before the trial of said cause of the resignation of his former counsel, who had at the time informed him that the case could not go to trial upon the following day because of the operation and effect of section 286 of the Code of Civil Procedure. The matter having been submitted to the court, the motion to set aside said judgment was denied and thereupon this appeal from said judgment and from said order denying the said defendant's motion to set aside the same was taken. *790
The sole question presented upon this appeal is as to the operation and effect of section 286 of the Code of Civil Procedure upon the situation as presented by the foregoing admitted facts. Section
The phrase in said section which is brought immediately under review is that reading "ceases to act as such," the contention of the appellant being that the interpretation to be put upon said phrase is "ceases to act as the attorney for the particular party to an action for whom he was formerly acting as attorney," while on the other hand, the respondent insists that this phrase in said section means "ceases to act as an attorney"; or, in other words, "ceases to be an attorney." In the absence of direct authority in the decisions of the courts of this state, we are thus put to a study of the origin and history of this section of our Code of Civil Procedure for what light these may shed upon the interpretation to be placed upon this particular clause therein. It would seem to be fairly beyond dispute that section 286 of the California Code of Civil Procedure came directly into our jurisprudence from a like section of the New York Code of Civil Procedure existing therein in practically identical form at the time of the original adoption of our California codes. The section of the New York Code of Civil Procedure then in existence was codified therein from 2 Revised Statutes of New York, page 287 (edition of 1829) and to have been ingrafted therein from an act of the New York legislature adopted in 1787 (c. 35, sec. 4), which reads as follows: "When any attorney shall die, or cease to act, or be put out of the roll of attorneys, the persons for whom he was attorney shall be warned to appoint another attorney in his place so that in the meantime no damage or prejudice may come to the party." (1 Laws of New York [Greenleaf] 1778-1787.) The foregoing provisions of the New York statutes and codes do not seem to have been made the subject of any direct interpretation by the courts of that state bearing upon the meaning to be given to the phrase *791
"ceases to act" therein, but apparently this particular provision in the laws of New York has been carried into the statutes of other and later formed commonwealths since it appears in practically identical language therein. The state of Michigan adopted a similar provision prior to 1872, as appears from the Compiled Laws of Michigan of that year (Comp. Laws, sec. 5630), the language of which is substantially identical with that of our own code section. In the case of Coon v. Plymouth Plank RoadCo.,
Section
The judgment and order are affirmed.
Shenk, J., Seawell, J., Lennon, J., Curtis, J., and Waste, C.J., concurred. *795