56 Mo. 310 | Mo. | 1874
delivered the opinion of the court.
These two cases present precisely the same point for our determination and are therefore considered together. They are appeals'from a justice of the peace. The judgments before the justice were rendered in favor of the defendant, and in due time on a subsequent day the plaintiff appealed to the Circuit Court and the justice returned the appeals and they were filed on the 19th day of April, 1870.
In June, 1872, the cases were called for trial in the Circuit Court, and the defendant failing to appear, judgments by default were taken and made final in favor of the plaintiff. The defendant afterwards filed motions to set aside the judgments, and for a new trial which were overruled and he excepted.
The judgments were affirmed at General Term, and the defendant has appealed to this court. The only grounds relied on in the motions for a new trial, were that the defendant had a good and meritorious defense, and that his attorney at the time the cases were called, was necessarily absent attending to an important criminal case pending in the Court of Criminal Correction of St. Louis county ; that both courts convened at the same hour, and the attorney hastened to the Court of Criminal Correction and procured a continuance of the case pending in that court, and was not absent more than half an hour — when he returned and found that judgments had been taken in these cases a few minutes previously. These facts were supported by the affidavit of the attorney.
Judgment affirmed,