53 Mo. 579 | Mo. | 1873
delivered the opinion of the court.
This was an action in the nature of a bill in chancery to set aside and annul certain deeds set forth in the petition.
The summons was returnable to the November term, 1872, of the Circuit Court. The defendant by its attorney acknowledged, in writing on the writ, service of the same. Owing to some correspondence which was had between the attorneys for the respective parties, the defendant failed to appear or file answer, or otherwise plead to the petition, at the return term, and the plaintiff took a judgment for want of answer, and had it made final at the time of entering the interlocutory judgment.
At the next term of the court, the defendant appeared by its attorney, and filed a motion to set aside the judgment which had been taken at the November term, and for leave to plead. Several grounds were set forth in the motion, but it is unnecessary to notice them, as the only point now before us is, whether the court could act at all upon this motion af
The court entertained the motion, and set aside the judgment, and the defendant filed a demurrer to plaintiff’s petition. When the demurrer was called for hearing, the plaintiff objected to all the proceedings in the premises, and announced to the court, that he would stand on his judgment as rendered at the November term, 1872; that he M'ould not. prosecute the case any further, because the court had no jurisdiction to interfere with the judgment rendered in his favorTJpon this announcement being made, the court dismissed the plaintiff’s petition for want of prosecution, to which the plaintiff excepted, and has brought the case here by writ of error.
Our code of practice does not authorize a judgment for want of an answer to be made final at the return term of the summons in this class of cases, without the consent of the defendant in counties of forty thousand inhabitants, or less. Where the suit is founded upon a written instrument, or upon a judgment of a court of record, and the demand is ascertained by such instrument, or the record of such judgment, or where the suit is upon an open account, or account stated, and the items of the account are set forth in, or annexed to, the petition, and the defendant be personally served by delivering to him a copy, a final judgment may be rendered against him at the time of entering his default at the return term. (See 2 W. S., 1053, §§ 9, 10.) But in all other eases not provided for in the preceding sections, in those counties where there are only forty thousand inhabitants, or less, an interlocutory judgment, taken at the return term, cannot be made final at that term, but, when taken at the next or any subsequent term, it may be made final at the time it is rendered. (2 W. S., 1053, § 11; 1011, § 5; 1039, § 5.) The three sections above referred to must be read together to ascertain the intention of the Legislature, and, when so read, it will be manifest that a judgment by default, nildicit} or for want of answer, in the class of cases under eonsid
The court might have simply set aside the final judgment, and left the default standing. But it also had the power, in a proper case, to set aside the default and permit the defendant to plead. Whether this discretion was exercised soundly in this case, is not a question necessary for us to pass on. After'the demurrer was filed and called for hearing, the plain-, tiff voluntarily withdrew from the case, and announced that he would not further prosecute it,, but rely on the judgment that had been set aside. The court very properly, at this stage of the proceedings, entered a judgment of a dismissal for want of prosecution.
Let the judgment be affirmed.