Appellant, Ferguson & Co., appeals a denial of its motion for new trial, which was filed in an attempt to set aside a default judgment rendered against it and in favor of appellee, Doug Roll d/b/a Front-line Search (Roll). Because we find that the trial court abused its discretion in overruling Ferguson & Co.’s motion for new trial, we sustain Ferguson & Co.’s second point of error and reverse and remand this cause to the trial court for proceedings in accordance with this opinion.
On May 23, 1988, Roll filed suit against Ferguson & Co., alleging that Ferguson & Co. had breached an agreement to compensate Roll for services he had performed in recruiting a job candidate later hired by Ferguson & Co. According to Roll’s original petition, Roll, on behalf of his company, Frontline Search, had entered into an agreement with Bill Ferguson, а principal of Ferguson & Co., pursuant to which Roll would attempt to locate and recruit job candidates for Ferguson & Co. It was further allegedly agreed that, if a candidate recruited by Roll was subsequently hired by Ferguson & Co. within one year, Roll would be entitled to receive a commission equal to thirty percent of the candidate’s first year compеnsation. It was Roll’s contention that this agreement was entered into at the end of December 1986, that Ferguson & Co. had hired one of the candidates Roll had recruited, Ron Gumz, on December 1, 1987, and that Ferguson & Co. had thereafter failed and refused to pay Roll the agreed upon commission.
It is undisputed that Bill Ferguson of Ferguson & Co. was served with citation as to Roll’s suit on June 2, 1988. No answer was ever filed. On August 11, 1988, the trial court entered a default judgment in favor of Roll and awarded him $27,000 in *695 damages, plus attorney’s fees and prejudgment interest. Ferguson & Co. filed a motion for new trial on September 9, 1988, accompanied by the affidavits of Bill Ferguson and Ed Townsend, who was president and chief operating officer of Ferguson & Co. at the time the events relating to Rоll’s suit occurred. The motion and affidavits relied upon the following facts to prove that Ferguson & Co.’s failure to answer was the result of an accident and mistake, rather than conscious indifference. After Bill Ferguson had been served the citation regarding Roll’s suit, he attempted to forward it to Townsend by way of the company’s inter-office mail. Unbeknown to Ferguson, the citation was somehow lost en route to Townsend, and he never received it. Consequently, Ferguson assumed that Townsend and the company’s attorney had taken care of answering the suit, and he did not find out differently until he was notified on August 15, 1988 of the default judgment entered against Ferguson & Co. The company’s motion for new trial also set forth various defenses to Roll’s cause of action and asserted that a new trial in the cause would neither occasion delay nor cause prejudice to Roll.
Roll filed a response to Ferguson & Co.’s motion for new trial and, on October 24, 1988, the trial court judge signed an order overruling the motion. Ferguson & Co. then perfected an appeal to this Court, alleging six points of error.
CRADDOCK TEST
Ferguson & Co. alleges in its sеcond point of error that the county court abused its discretion in overruling Ferguson & Co.’s motion for new trial. A motion for new trial is addressed to the trial court’s discretion and the court’s ruling on such will not be disturbed on appeal in the absence of a showing of an abuse of that discretion.
Strackbein v. Prewitt,
In an effort to aid courts in dealing uniformly with cases such as the one currently before us, the Craddock court set forth a standard which has been followed in this state for the past fifty years:
A default judgment should be set aside and a new trial ordered in any case in which the failure of the defendant to answer before judgment was not intentional, or the result of conscious indifference on his part, but was due to a mistake or accident; provided the motion sets up a meritorious defense and is filed at a time when the granting thereof will occasion no dеlay or otherwise work an injury to the plaintiff.
Craddock,
CONSCIOUS INDIFFERENCE
Considering each prong of the
Craddock
test separately, we will first determine whether Ferguson & Co.’s failure to file an answer to Roll’s suit was due to a mistake or accident, or was, instead, intentional or the result of conscious indifference. “Some excuse, but not necessarily a good excuse,”
Craddock,
The excuse of a citation having been misplaced or inadvertently lost was upheld in
Craddock
itself.
Craddock,
Despite the foregoing case law, Roll contends that Ferguson
&
Co. has failed to sustain its burden to show that its agents (Ferguson, Townsend, and the company attorney) were free of negligеnce or conscious indifference. In support of his argument, Roll cites the Texas Supreme Court case of
Grissom v. Watson,
in which the court quotes the opinion in
Harris v. Le-bow,
To explain our rejection of the “rule” set forth above, it may be illustrative to consider the case law cited by the
Harris
court as authority for its requirement that a defendant must show himself and/or his agent to be free of negligence in a
Craddock
context. The two supporting cases cited in
Harris, Grammar v. Hobby,
In
Berenzweig,
one of the defendants entrusted the citation for all the defendants to his attorney’s seсretary who, he later testified, assured him that the attorney would properly handle the matter. The defendant subsequently called his attorney five or six times to check on the suit, but was never able to reach him. The two men finally encountered each other on the street and the defendant asked about his case. The attorney promised to look into the matter and, later that day, informed the defendant that the suit was filed in another county and, therefore, he would be unable to handle it. A default judgment was, coincidentally, taken against all of the defendants on the same day that they received notice that they were not represented by counsel. The court in
Berenzweig
found that the defendants had not shown that their failure to file answers was due to a mistake or accident, and cited the
Grammar
opinion for the proposition that “[f]ai-lure to employ an attorney and make sure that he understands he is to file an answer, unless he expects to represent himself, is ordinarily
inexcusable negligence." Berenzweig,
It is clear from this review that the
Harris
court took a quantum leap from the holdings in
Grammar
and
Berenzweig
to reach its “free of negligence” rule. Furthermore, the holdings in
Harris
and
Grissom
do not appear to truly stand for such a stringent rule. In both
Harris
and
Grissom,
the individual defendant forwarded the citation and petition to a representative of his insurance carrier. In
Harris,
the record was silent as to why the insurance company failed to file an answer as it allegedly had agreed to do.
Harris,
Thus, we conclude that this line of cases should properly be interepreted as holding that when a defendant’s excuse is his reliance on a third party to file his answer or to notify him of a trial setting, he must prove that the third party’s failure was due to accident or mistake and not intentional or the result of conscious indifference. We do not read these cases as establishing a rule that a defendant must show that he and/or his agent were free of negligence. Our reasoning is supported by the in-depth analysis given this topic in the law review article of Pohl and Hittner, Judgment by Default in Texas, 37 SW.L.J. 421, 443, in which the authors unequivocally state that, under the Craddock test, “The defendant’s negligence will not preclude the sеtting aside of a judgment by default. In fact, the defendant’s burden of demonstrating the accidental or mistaken nature of his failure to answer may often result in an admission of negligence.” Pohl and Hittner, 37 SW.L.J. at 443.
We also note that the recent supreme court case of
Cliff v. Huggins,
In attempting to prove conscious indifference on the part of Ferguson & Co., Roll asserts that Ferguson & Co., through its agent, Bill Ferguson, failed to exercise “due diligence” to ensure that an answer was properly filed,
Cummins v. Paisin Constr. Co.,
We decline to accept the due diligence requirement of
Cummins
because it is inextricably linked in that opinion to the free of negligence standard which was first enunciated by the
Harris
court, and which we have held is not the proper test under
Craddock.
It is unnecessary at this time to take issue with the сonscious indifference definition set forth in
Johnson,
since that case can be factually distinguished from the one at bar. In
Johnson,
the defendant failed to timely file an answer because he allegedly did not understand the nature of the citation served upon him. He simply read the “papers” and filed them. The court held that this inaction due to alleged ignorance amounts to evidence of conscious indifference.
Accord First Nat’l Bank v. Peterson,
In the case beforе us, we must look to the knowledge and acts of Ferguson & Co., and its agents, in determining whether it acted with intentional disregard or conscious indifference when it failed to timely answer Roll’s lawsuit.
Strackbein,
Based on the foregoing, we hold that Ferguson & Co. met its burden to prove that the company аnd its agents failed to file a timely answer to Roll’s lawsuit because of an accident or mistake and that their failure was not intentional or the result of conscious indifference.
MERITORIOUS DEFENSE
Roll also contends that Ferguson & Co. has failed to adequately plead and prove any meritorious defenses to Roll’s claim. In
Ivy,
the supreme court explained that the rule in
Craddock
does not require
proof
of a meritorious defense but, rather, requires that a defendant set up a meritorious defense: “The motion must allege
facts
which in law would constitute a defense to the cause of action asserted by the plaintiff, and must be supported by affidavits or other evidence proving prima facie that the defendant has such meritorious defense.”
Ivy,
A meritorious defense is one that, if proved, would cause a different result upon a retrial of the case, although it need not be a totally opposite result.
The Moving Co. v. Whitten,
In its motion for new trial, Ferguson & Co. asserted that it had several meritorious defenses to Roll’s breach of contract action. The company, through its motion and the affidavits of Ferguson and Townsend, denied the existence of any type of agreement between Ferguson & Co. and *699 Roll. It also asserted that, if such an agreement did exist, Gumz was hired because of Townsend’s prior association with Gumz and not because of any of Roll’s efforts, and it stated that Ferguson & Co. never agreed to pay Roll a percentage of Gumz’s first year compensation as a fee for services rendered by Roll. Although not specifically set forth in the motion, bоth Ferguson and Townsend’s affidavits further alleged that Gumz was not paid a $90,000 salary for his first year with Ferguson & Co. and, therefore, that the $27,-000 in damages awarded to Roll as representing thirty percent of Gumz’s compensation, was a completely incorrect figure.
In
Dallas Heating Co., Inc.,
one of the defendant’s meritorious defenses was its denial of the existence of any agreemеnt with the plaintiff regarding the sale of a new, rather than rebuilt, compressor unit.
Dallas Heating Co., Inc.,
NO DELAY OR INJURY
In order to meet the third prong of the
Craddock
test, Ferguson & Co. must have filed its motion at a time when the granting thereоf would occasion no delay or otherwise injure Roll.
Dallas Heating Co., Inc.,
In its motion for new trial, Ferguson & Co. enumerated all of the foregoing requisites to negate any type of injury to Roll resulting from the trial court’s granting of its motion. Roll did not controvert this lack of injury in either his response to Ferguson & Co.’s motion or in his arguments to this Court. Therefore, we hold that Ferguson & Co. has successfully met all three criteria for the setting aside of a default judgment, as set forth in Crad-dock, and, accordingly, that the county court abused its discretion in overruling Ferguson. & Co.’s motion for new trial. Because we are sustaining Ferguson & Co.’s second point of error, we do not consider its other five points of error.
The judgment is reversed and the cause is remanded to the trial court for proceedings in accordance with this opinion.
