72 Ky. 66 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1872
delivered the opinion oe the court.
On the 29th of April, 1867, Benjamin W. Hitchcock, of the state of New York, but then temporarily in Lewis County, Kentucky, was sued by John McCall in an ordinary action for twenty-two thousand five hundred dollars, for which, on the 28th day of May, 1867, Hitchcock having failed to answer, the court “upon proof heard in open court” rendered a judgment against him. The petition as amended before the judgment was taken imported a liability of the defendant to account to the plaintiff for three hundred shares of stock in the
Hitchcock, who in the mean time had gone to New York, it appears, received information there of the judgment against him; and returning to Kentucky on the 9th day of July, 1867, filed a petition for an order vacating the judgment against him, and a new trial on the ground of accident or surprise which ordinary prudence could not have guarded against (Civil Code, secs. 369, 373), and also for alleged “ unavoidable casualty or misfortune,” preventing him from appearing and defending the action, as provided by section 579 of the Code; and tendering an answer to the original petition, and setting forth substantially the same facts as therein alleged as constituting a sufficient defense, he alleged certain other facts, which we .will hereafter more particularly mention, conducing to show that, although he was duly summoned- to answer McCall’s petition, he was -unavoidably prevented from doing so, and from preparing and
McCall filed an answer controverting the material averments of the petition, and alleging facts, moreover, tending to show that the inability of the plaintiff and his counsel to learn the nature of the original action by inspecting the papers was attributable alone to their own laches and fault. A trial of the case having resulted in an order setting aside the former judgment and granting to Hitchcock a new trial of the action against him, McCall has appealed from that decision to this court; and Hitchcock having also presented an appeal from the original judgment, the two .appeals have been argued and submitted together, and will be so disposed of in this opinion.
If the judgment awarding a new trial shall be affirmed, it must logically result that the appeal of Hitchcock should be dismissed, for in that event there will be no judgment against him to be revised by this court. For obvious reasons therefore the appeal of McCall should be first considered. Although this court has already, upon mature consideration, overruled a motion of Hitchcock to dismiss this appeal, based on the supposed ground that the judgment was not final, and therefore not subject to revision in this court on this appeal (7 Bush, 616), we are yet somewhat persistently urged to review the grounds of that decision. If we had the time and inclination to do so, we are sure that this second argument of the question of jurisdiction has failed to present it in any aspect more favorable to the appellee than that in which it was before carefully considered, and, as we believe, correctly decided.
With reference to the evidence conducing to show the existence of a valid defense to the original action, we refrain from saying more than that we regard it as sufficient to entitle
It appears that on the day of the institution of McCall’s suit Hitchcock, who with his wife was sojourning at the house of McCall, and then about leaving Lewis County for the state of New York, was at the clerk’s office in Yanceburg, in company with McCall, engaged in settling some business matters, and among them an account of his attorney Thomas for seventy-five dollars, which he paid; and that, unaware that either Thomas or McCall was about to sue him, he started to walk with McCall from the clerk’s office to the house of the latter, and was overtaken on the way by the sheriff, who delivered to him copies of summons in the suit of McCall, and also an action just brought by Thomas against him. It does- not certainly appear that he examined these papers further than to see that they were summons in suits against him; whereupon he became exasperated, and threw away or tore up the papers, and cursed the county and its people. Leaving the house of McCall on that evening, he went to Cincinnati or Covington, where he engaged the services of Mr. Myers, a practicing lawyer, with whom and in company with Barney he went back to Yanceburg to investigate and prepare to defend the suits which Thomas and others had brought against him, as well as other cases against the oil companies in which he and Barney were interested. On arriving at Yanceburg and repairing to the clerk’s office it appears that Myers called on the deputy clerk to show him
Do these facts constitute a proper case for relief, either under section 369 or section 579 of the Code?
It is a general principle of practice that “ when a party or his counsel are taken by surprise, whether by fraud or accident, on a material point or circumstance which could not. reasonably have been anticipated, and when want of skill, care, or attention can not be justly imputed, and injustice has been done, a new trial will be granted.” (1 Graham and Waterman on New Trials, 169; Seymour v. Miller, 32 Conn. 402; Martin v. Podge, 5 Burrows, 2631.)
Common justice seems to require the application of this, principle in its full force for the relief of Hitchcock in this case, unless he deprived himself of its benefit by his own rash and seemingly improper act in destroying the copy of the summons which might, if preserved, have been useful to his counsel and the clerk in their search for the papers of the suit. It is not, however, every neglect or merely constructive fault
As to the appeal of Hitchcock, it results, for reasons already suggested, that it must be dismissed.
Wherefore the judgment in favor of Hitchcock is affirmed, and his appeal from the other judgment is dismissed.