The fifth assignment of error requires us to determine whether the referee erred in overruling defendant’s motion to set aside the judgment and for a new-trial. It is insisted by defendant in error that there is no statute requiring a referee to notify the parties-of the date fixed by him for the hearing of a cause-
It is insisted, however, that the defendant was guilty of laches in failing to respond immediately upon service of the notice, for, by doing so, he could have informed himself that the hearing had been postponed; and that his application to open the judgment was without merit, inasmuch as he failed to state to-the court that he had a meritorious defense to offer upon another trial. We think the defendant would have shown more respect to the process of the referee-by appearing before him immediately and requesting a postponement of the trial, but he had a legal right to ignore the notice, and suffer whatever consequences might legally flow from his disregard of it. And as the hour named in the notice for defendant’s appearance had passed, prior to its service, the defendant-had a right to regard the service of a notice functusofficio, as no notice at all, and to decline to appear in obedience to its supposed command. The notice having been served upon him after the hour fixed for the-hearing, he had a right to presume that the officer-would so return, and that the plaintiff would not further persist in the hearing in the face of this irregular service. The first notice the defendant is shown to have had that plaintiff persisted in acting upon such irregular service was nearly three years thereaf
We think the defendant should have had notice of the trial, and that the failure to give it deprived him of a substantial right (Ballard vs. Lippman, 32 Fla. 481, 14 South. Rep. 154); and the judgment is, therefore reversed and a new trial granted.
