40 Wash. 48 | Wash. | 1905
This is an appeal from an order refusing to vacate and set aside a judgment of dismissal. While the petition for the vacation as filed contains some 108 pages of closely printed matter’, its salient points can he summarized in much fewer words. In brief, tbe case is this: On June 15, 1872, one David Maurer obtained title, under
On March 12, 1883, Sarah Maurer, claiming to be the widow of David Maurer, and certain other’ persons, all adults, claiming to he children of David and Sarah Maurer, and heirs at law of David Maurer, began an action of ejectment, in the then district court of the territory of Washington, holding terms in King county, against the Renton Coal Company, and others, then in the possession of the land, to recover the same. Various motions and demurrers were filed in the action, which were heard and determined by the court, the case finally reaching an issue on a question of fact on May 26, 1888. Prior to this time, commissions to take depositions had been issued, and tbe depositions of certain of witnesses had been taken and returned, but no movement in court to put the case to trial was thereafter taken by either party.
On Rovember 20, 1900, the respondents moved the court to dismiss the action, serving notice of its motion on the attorneys who had last represented the plaintiffs. Certain of the petitioners were then in Seattle, and consulted with various attorneys concerning their legal rights, finally employing one J. O. Zonig, who employed William Martin to represent them on the hearing to he had on the motion to dismiss. This motion was called np on February 26, 1901, at which time a judgment dismissing the action for want of prosecution was entered.
On January 21, 1902, the appellants filed their original
The order appealed from was properly entered. Conceding that the appellants have shown cause sufficient to excuse their failure to appeal from the judgment of dismissal, wa think they have failed to show any cause for vacating that judgment. The cause of action they now seek to prosecute arose in 1813. The plaintiffs were then all adults, suffering from no legal disability which rendered them incapable of prosecuting the action in their own right; yet they waited within eight days of ten years, before bringing their action at all, took five years more to bring it to an issue of fact, and then for nearly fifteen years did nothing looking towards bringing the issue to trial. Had the petitioners been laboring under some disability, rendering them incapable of prosecuting the action individually, for the whole, o>r some considerable portion, of this period, they might, with some reason, claim that the neglect of the persons to whom was intrusted the duty of prosecuting it should not be visited upon them, hut the excuses here offered are barren of everything that appeals to the conscience of the court. The record presents a case of neglect, pure and simple, by those in whom the right of action originally vested, and contains a very pregnant admission that its sudden revival owes its origin to the fact that speculative interests are now in control. While it is time that a rightful cause of action should not be turned down merely because it is prosecuted by persons who have a speculative interest in its result, yet this is an element worthy of consideration when the right to further prosecute is a matter of discretion with the court, and especially is it so when
Mount, C. J., Hadley, Rudkin, Crow, Root, and Dunbar, JJ., concur.