66 So. 64 | Ala. | 1914
Application for writ of mandamus to require the vacation of an order or judgment, entered in the circuit court of Jefferson county in the cause of John Doak (petitioner) against the city of Birmingham et al., setting aside a previously entered judgment by default, with writ of inquiry executed against the city of Birmingham.
Doak’s action was instituted March 4, 1913; and the summons to the city of Birmingham was returned executed March 8, 1913, by service on Culpepper Exum, commissioner of the municipality. On April 28, 1913, judgment by default was entered against the city on plaintiff’s motion. On May 7, 1913, the city, through its counsel, filed its motion to have the judgment by default set aside. On May 10, 1913, the motion was heard and arguments were made by counsel for the respective parties, and on that day it was “ordered, decreed, and adjudged by the court that said motion be, and the same
The Practice Act governing proceedings in the circuit court of Jefferson county, approved February 28, 1889 (Acts 1888-89, p. 797 et seq.), contains these presently pertinent provisions: “And in all cases, whether commenced by summons and complaint, attachment, or otherwise, any defendant failing for more than thirty days after service has been perfected upon him to appear and demur or plead, shall be held to be in default, and, at any time thereafter, judgment by default, on motion of the plaintiff, may be rendered against him; provided, however, that the court may, for good cause shown, allow such judgment so obtained by default to be set aside, and demurrer or pleas- to be filed, on such terms as the court may think just; but no application to set aside such judgment, unless it be for some reversible error committed in the i^endition thereof, shall be entertained by the court, unless accompanied by an affidavit made by the defendant or his agent or attorney to the effect that, in the belief of the affiant, the defendant has a lawful defense to- such suit. * * * That final judgments rendered in said court shall, after expiration of thirty days from their rendition, be taken and deemed as completely beyond the control of the court, as if the term of said court at which said judgments are rendered had ended at the end of said thirty dáys; provided, however, that nothing herein contained shall prevent parties from applying for new trials or rehearings, * * * when so made, or shall prevent parties from
It thus appears that in the matter under review the motion to set aside the judgment by default was made within 30 days after its entry, was taken under advisement by the court within 30 days after the entry of the judgment by default, without at any time the entry of any formal order of continuance, and was favorably ruled upon during term time after the expiration of thirty days from the entry of the judgment by default.
It is insisted for petitioner, as upon the quoted provisions of the Practice Act, that the failure to- act upon the motion before the expiration of 30 days from April 28, 1913 — the date of the judgment by default — or to order a continuance of the motion before the expiration of that 30-day period, effected to deprive the court of any power to consider the motion. It is established with us that the expiration of the 30-day period stipulated in the Practice Act without action by the court on a motion for new trial or to set aside a judgment by default, or without an effective continuance of such a motion, the power of the court becomes extinct.—Ex parte Payne, 130 Ala. 189, 192, 29 South. 622; Hundley v. Younge, 69 Ala. 89. Such motions are not, like causes, continued by operation of law because not disposed of.—Hundley v. Younge, supra; Payne’s Case, supra. So, the real .question in this connection is whether the taking under advisement of the motion to set aside the judgment by default within the 30-day period operated a continuance thereof to such time as the court
The order of the circuit court in taking the motion under advisement, after argument — a process that passed the matter into the breast of the court — was an observance of the common-law practice described in the phrase curia advisari vult .(the court wishes to- consider the matter.). The effect of the formal entry of that order was to- continue the motion until the court might, during a lawful sitting, attain a conclusion and pronounce judgment thereupon.—Bouvier’s Law Dict. pp. 485, 486; Black on Judg. § 180; Black’s Law Dict. p. 310; Clarke v. Read, 5 N. J. Law, 486; Semple v. Trustees, etc., 8 N. J. Law, 60. Where the order is made taking the matter under advisement, it is the duty of the court to give the parties notice of the time, at the place of sitting of the courtr the court will deliver its judgment.—Clark v. Read, supra; Semple v. Trustees, etc., supra. If there is undue delay by the court in delivering its judgment, a party has his remedy to compel action by the court.—Clark v. Read, supra.
It is urged for petitioner that the common-law practice of taking under advisement could be observed in respect of causes only — not for the purpose of deliberation upon motions — after judgment, to- have judgment set aside, or a new trial granted. No- good reason appears, nor has any been stated, why a different practice should be allowable in one instance and not in the other. The object of the practice is to permit the court to deliberate; to- afford time and opportunity for the court to advise its judgment. Á seasonably presented motion for a new trial, or to set aside a judgment by default, invokes judicial action of high character and of seri
Usually, a continuance of a cause or proceeding is, in legal contemplation, an adjournment or postponement thereof, to a time certain.—Commonwealth v. Maloney, 145 Mass. 205, 208, 13 N. E. 482.
An order of continuance of a cause or proceeding presupposes a status opposed to that prevailing when it has been submitted to the court for judgment. Such ■an order (continuance) negatives the notion that a complete hearing has been had and the matter committed to the court for its judgment. If the ordinary order of continuance is entered in a cause or proceeding, there is ■a necessary implication that the matter is still in fieri in respect to a hearing thereon.
The order curia advisari vult manifests the fact that the hearing is complete and the postponement is for allowing deliberation by the court — not with the view to further or other hearing in the premises. If, in order to avert the extinction of the juridical power over the proceeding because of the expiration of the term or of the limitation fixed for a period to have that effect, it were required that formal order of continuance should be entered, an anomalous situation would be created, ■or else the rational common-law practice under consideration would be forbidden observance. The common-law” practice indicated is too conservative of the best re-
The effect of the order of the court taking the motion under advisement being to preserve the power of the court to consider of and pronounce its judgment after the expiration of the 30-day period stipulated in the Practice Act quoted, it is clear that no discontinuance of the proceeding resulted; for it is established with us that a discontinuance can only he predicated of some positive act of the actor in the proceeding, or in consequence of the actor’s failure or omission to perform some precedent duty enjoined upon the actor by law.—Ex parte Holton, 69 Ala. 164, 188; Ex parte Humes, 130 Ala. 201, 30 South. 732.
It is insisted for the petitioner that the affidavit made by counsel for the city in support of its motion to set aside the judgment by default was insufficient for the purpose under the terms of the first-quoted provision of the Practice Act. It has been ruled that the failure to file with the motion an affidavit, “by the defendant, his agent or atttorney, to the effect that, in the belief of affiant, the defendant has a lawful defense to such suit,” operated to defeat the right of the court to consider a motion to set aside the judgment by default.—Ex parte Payne, 130 Ala. 189, 29 South. 622.
The substantial parts of the affidavit filed with the motion of the city to set aside the judgment by default will be set out in- the report of the appeal. While it does not contain the exact phraseology employed in the quoted excerpt from section 1 of the Practice Act, it is. a substantial compliance with the provisions of that act. The affidavit substitutes “opinion” for “belief” and' “meritorious defense” for “lawful defense,” and concludes with the statement that the city was not liable;
“The power of a court of record over its judgments during the term at which they are rendered is very large, if not unlimited. It rests within the sound discretion of the court to set them aside, when satisfied that injustice has been dohne, or that they have been inadvertently or improvidently entered. * * * The judgments of courts are in the breast of the judge until the final adjournment of the term, and may be set aside or modified during the term.”—Talladega Merc. Co. v. McDonald, 97 Ala. 508, 511, 12 South. 34, 35; Sparks v. Reeves, 165 Ala. 358, 51 South. 575.
In the last-cited opinion, treating the discretionary power under consideration, this court said: “Both of these matters are within the discretion of the trial court, and, unless abused, are not revisable on appeal.”
And in the later pertinent deliverance made here, in response to Parker’s petition for mandamus (172 Ala. 136, 138, 54 South. 572), a like pronouncement was made. To the same effect is Allen v. Lathrop, 90 Ala. 490, 8 South. 129.
It cannot be affirmed that the circuit court abused the sound discretion with which it was invested in the premises. It was the duty of the court to consider all the circumstances Avith the view to advising its judgment so that the discretionary poAver reposed in it might be wisely exercised. It was not, and so the court seems to have concluded, necessary to enter upon an inquiry involving the impeachment of the sheriff’s return; though it was proper that the court consider whether
The decision, in respect of a new trial, in McLeod’s Case, 108 Ala. 81, 19 South. 326, has been consulted. It is not opposed to the conclusion we have stated. There the whole contention was that counsel’s absence from the trial was unavoidable. This court found that the undisputed evidence refuted this assertion, and thereupon affirmed that the question ivas one of law and not of discretion in the trial court. Here the judgment was by default; and the circumstances shown to the court might quite reasonably have invited its conclusion that “good cause” justified the restoration of the cause to a trial-status.
The writ of mandamus prayed is denied.
Writ denied.