127 Iowa 112 | Iowa | 1905
Section 4568 of the Code provides, in substance, that, if an appeal be taken from a judgment by default before a justice, the defendant may, before noon of the second day of the term at which the appeal is triable, in the court to which it was taken, file any pleadings necessary to properly set forth any defense he may have to the action. The trial court held the provision in this statute as to time mandatory, and consequently struck defendant’s answer from the files. It is not a case wherein the trial court exercised any discretion it may have had in the premises. Hence that question is not in the case.
The sole inquiry here is, is the statute mandatory in. its provisions as to the time when an answer may be filed? There is nothing in the statute itself which indicates a penalty for failure to file answer within the time stated, and the language itself is permissive. Prior to the adoption of this statute, or its immediate predecessor, it was held that a defendant in default before a justice could not, as of right, file an answer after appeal, and that in such cases he should make some showing or excuse for not having answered before the justice. Ruddick v. Vail, 7 Iowa, 44; Craine v.
Various other statutes provide for the perfection of an appeal of an action before a justice, and as to what shall be done to give the district court jurisdiction. These statutes were strictly followed in this case. Hence there is no question as to the jurisdiction of the district court. The sole inquiry, as we have said, is, what effect shall be given the time provision of section 4568 of the Code? If mandatory, the trial court was right in striking the answer. If directory, then it was wrong, and the case should be reversed. Trials on the merits are favored in law, and, by express pro-vision of statute, all errors, irregularities, and illegalities in the trial before the justice are to be disregarded. The appeal brings the case up for trial on its merits, and for no other purpose. Code, section 4562. Other statutes with reference to the time for filing pleadings, where not in express terms made mandatory, as in section 3515, are generally regarded as directory. Keeney v. Lyon, 10 Iowa, 546. Construing section 3550 of the Code, or its equivalent, see Williams v. Ins. Co., 50 Iowa, 561. Construing section 3552, see Kehoe v. Carville, 84 Iowa, 415; Briggs v. Coffin, 91 Iowa, 329; Walker v. Hutchinson, 50 Iowa, 364; Redfield v. Miller, 59 Iowa, 393; Jones v. Merrill, 73 Iowa,
The ruling of the district court on the motion to strike was erroneous, and the judgment is reversed.