71 W. Va. 674 | W. Va. | 1913
To plaintiff’s action of trespass on the ease for malicious prosecution, defendant pleaded in abatement the pendency of another suit fox the same cause of action, between the same parties, instituted in another county prior to the suing out of the writ in the action to which the plea was filed. The plea in abatement was filed at the rules at which plaintiff filed his declaration. To this plea plaintiff did not reply at either of two rule days that intervened before the next term of the court. At that term, the court dismissed the suit on the plea in abatement as to which there was no reply. The order recites the presence of plaintiff, by his attorney, at the time of this dismissal. He joined no issue on the plea in abatement, but suffered the case to be dismissed because of his failure to reply. The order plainly shows his failure to prosecute. He took no exception to the dismissal.
Ten days thereafter, at the same term, plaintiff again appeared to the action and moved to set aside the order of dismissal and to be permitted to file a replication to the plea in abatement. Upon the objection of defendant, the court overruled the motion. Plaintiff reserved exceptions covering the action of the court in overruling the motion. He has prosecuted this writ of error to the judgment of the court in that particular.
The bill of exceptions shows that plaintiff moved to set aside the dismissal and to be permitted to file a replication to the plea in abatement “upon the ground that the case was called up out of its order, in the absense of the plaintiff and without his knowledge or presence of his counsel and dismissed, and upon the further ground that he had the right to enter the said replication during the said term of court.”
How, the record shows plaintiff’s attorney to have been present and to have allowed the suit to go without further prosecution That record is a verity. We can not overthrow it on the mere statement of the ground for the motion. The trial court which had actual knowledge of the fact heard that statement but still left the record of the presence of plaintiff by his attorney to stand and the fact of his presence to become foreclosed. We can not at all presume that the court would have done this if the fact were otherwise than the record states it.
The trial court also overruled the grouhd that the case was
As to the other ground, ordinarily plaintiff would not have the right to file a replication any time during the term. At the time of the dismissal, he had had full time and opportunity to reply, Two rule days at which he could have filed the replication had elapsed. He still could have filed it in term up to the time of dismissal.' As the record comes to us, he remained in default in this behalf.
There is absolutely nothing in the record to sustain the grounds on which'plaintiff relied to set aside the dismissal. Plaintiff offered no affidavit or other tiring in support of these grounds. Then, can we say that the court erred in overruling them ? The presumption is that the court acted rightly. But plaintiff seems to insist that because he desired to reply before the term closed, it was error to deny him leave to do so. We can not justly say that the court erred herein. If plaintiff stood by and knowingly suffered default, as the record says he did, it was not error for the court to refuse to raise that default in the absence of excuse therefor. If it were otherwise, trial courts could easily be imposed upon.. Por instance, one could suffer a default as plaintiff did here and then on the last day of the term tender his plea or replication and cause it to be filed, thus cárrying the case over that term as he may have desired by his course therein. Or, one could stubbornly refuse to plead at the time his plea was due, and then put it in at a late and inconvenient time regardless of hardship on the opposite party and the court by such practice. Trial courts must be given some discretion to guard against dilatory practices and properly and justly to dispatch the public business. Of course we do not say that dilatory practice was in the mind of plaintiff’s counsel in the matter under consideration. But we do say that the record shows plaintiff voluntarily to have permitted judgment against himself by his own default and then to have failed to excuse himself for so doing, so that the trial court could, as on this record we must presume it did, justly refuse to hear him at a later day.
While we are of the opinion that Code 1906, ch. 127, sec. 11, applies to such a dismissal as the one in this case, yet, in the light
Ho abuse of sound discretion in the court to refuse to vacate
Affirmed.