25 S.D. 142 | S.D. | 1910
In the circuit court defendants Taylor and Loffler moved to vacate and open a default judgment taken against them in a case wherein the plaintiff, Joseph Jay, brought suit against four defendants, viz., Stockwell, Lusk, Taylor, and Loffler. The motion to vacate was based on the proposed answers, affidavits of merit, and other affidavits reciting the facts. Plaintiff also interposed affidavits in opposition thereto. The motion of these defendants, the appellants, to vacate and open said default judgment, being overruled and denied, exception was taken by Tajdor and Loffler, who appeal from such order.
It appears from the affidavits of Kunkle, Taylor, and Loffler: That on the 17th day of January, 1908, the summons and complaint were served upon each of the four defendants. That defendants Taylor and Loffler employed Plarry Kunkle as their attorney to answer for them, and that defendants Stockwell and tLusk employed Messrs. Gamble, Tripp & Holman as their attorneys to answer for them. That attorney Kunkle, upon ascertaining that Gamble, Tripp & Holman had been employed to answer for the other defendants, conferred with them in regard to interposing- a joint answer on behalf of all four defendants, and Kunkle states that the agreement was had between himself and Gamble, Tripp & Holman that, when Gamble, Tripp & Holman interposed an answer for their clients, Stockwell and Lusk, the answer would be the joint answer of all four defendants, and that Kunkle informed his clients of such 'arrangement. After-wards the defendants Stockwell and Lusk concluded not to answer, but to allow a default judgment to be taken against them under some arrangement with plaintiff, and so notified their attorneys, Gamble, Tripp & Holman, and, not being required to answer for their own clients, Gamble, Tripp & Holman interposed no answer at all for any of the defendants. Kunkle and his clients, not being notified of the change of procedure on the
The order denying the motion to open the default judgment is therefore reversed, and the lower court directed to permit the appellants to serve and file the said proposed answers upon such terms as may be just.