58 Tex. 405 | Tex. | 1883
A judgment by default was taken on the 18th of November, 1882, by appellees against the appellant for three hundred and thirty-one TV¡r dollars ($331.76), being on an open account for goods, wares and merchandise sold to him.
On the 20th of November, 1882, appellant filed his motion to set aside this judgment, and to permit him to file an answer setting up just and meritorious defenses to the appellees’ cause of action. The motion was based on two grounds: first, the serious sickness and absence from that cause of his attorney to whom he had confided the duty of filing his answer and of setting up the defenses upon Avhich he relied to defeat appellees’ recovery. His own severe illness at that time and at the time Avhcn the motion was made, he also set forth as a reason why he had been unable to move in the matter so as to avoid a judgment by default.
We think that, under the facts sworn to by the appellant, and
This case is a great deal-stronger than that of Power v. Gillespie, 27 Tex., 370, or the case of Watson v. Newsham, 17 Tex., 437, or that of Foster y. Martin, 20 Tex., 118, and differs from them in the facts. In this case, unlike the others, the motion was made promptly and in ample time. It also contains a good and sufficient excuse why his defense was not filed before default day, and, unlike the cases cited, he sets forth and shows in detail all the particulars of a defense, "which, if sustained on the trial by evidence to the satisfaction of a jury, will entitle him to a reduction of the appellees’ demand.
Under all the circumstances, the case seems to come rather within the rule laid down in Dorn v. Best, 15 Tex., 66, and Spencer v. Kennard, 12 Tex., 187, than that of Power v. Gillespie or Foster v. Martin.
The judgment is reversed and the cause remanded.
Reversed and remanded.