291 S.W. 747 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1927
Affirming.
In November, 1923, the appellee, Mishawaka Woolen Mills Manufacturing Company, an Indiana corporation, held two notes against the S.E. Welsh Department Store, a corporation doing business in Berea, Kentucky, of $555.92 each, and on the 28th day of that month it filed its equity petition against the latter, its stockholders (among *532 whom were appellants and plaintiffs below in this action, Scott T. McGuire and W.T. Lutes), and against some transferees of the corporate defendant, in which it alleged that the stockholding defendants were each indebted to the corporate defendant for unpaid stock subscriptions in a sum more than sufficient to satisfy plaintiffs' debt and, also alleged that the stockholders had disposed of all the corporate assets, aggregating as much as $75,000.00, and had appropriated to their use, and of that sum each of them received more than the amount of plaintiffs' debt, and it prayed judgment against the individual stockholders, including appellants and plaintiffs herein, for its debt, interest and cost.
Appellants as defendants in that cause employed Henry S. McGuire, an attorney of the Lexington bar and a brother to appellant Scott T. McGuire, to defend them in that suit, and on January 2, 1924, he filed on behalf of his clients a demurrer to that petition and it was continued from term to term until October, 1925, when it was overruled and defendants (appellants here) were, given until the following February, 1926, term to answer the petition. They failed and neglected to do so and before the expiration of the latter term default judgment was taken against them for the amount of 'the debt of the Indiana corporation, the plaintiff in that action, and the defendant in this one. Execution issued on that judgment and this action was filed against the plaintiff in the execution, and the sheriff of Madison county who held it, to enjoin its collection and to obtain a new trial of the action in which the judgment was obtained upon the ground of "unavoidable casualty" preventing plaintiffs from appearing and defending that action, and which remedy is given by subsection 7 of section 518 of the Civil Code of Practice. The answer denied the grounds relied on in the petition and after submission of proof the court dismissed the petition and appellants, who were the plaintiffs below, prosecute this appeal therefrom.
At the outset it may be stated that a new trial sought in this manner must be for grounds and facts dehors the record, since if they appear in the record the proper remedy is by appeal from the judgment. Duncan v. Allender,
Nowhere in the record does anything appear showing that the firm of Burnam Greenleaf promised or agreed to represent appellants at the February, 1926, term *534 of the court when the default judgment was taken against them, but if it were otherwise, then their neglect, if any, would be attributable to their clients the same as if they had been directly employed by appellants. The latter admit that they took no further steps to defend the cause in which the judgment was obtained after the giving of their depositions as on cross-examination to which we have referred, and that they never heard from the case thereafter until execution issued on the judgment. Surely, so far as they personally are concerned, it could not be insisted that they exercised any sort of diligence in defending that action against them, and, as we have seen, the court under the evidence necessarily found that the alleged disarming conversation of counsel for appellees herein when the depositions of appellants were taken, either did not occur or that if it did it was not such as to justify appellants in abandoning the defense of the action against them, and we are not prepared to say that the court erroneously so held.
Independently, however, of that fact, the petition in this case does not rely upon any fraud practiced by the successful party or his counsel in the obtention of the judgment, which ground is embodied in subsection 4 of section 51.8supra; but only relies upon subsection 7 of that section to obtain the new trial. If, however, subsection 4 of the section had been relied on, and if the conversation of counsel attributed to him had occurred as testified to by appellants, then, as we have seen, their counsel more than a year thereafter was twice notified by counsel for plaintiff in the judgment that his demurrer to the petition on behalf of appellants had been overruled and that an answer from them was due at the February, 1926, term of the court, and we have hereinbefore recited all that he did to defend the cause for his clients.
Whatever else the phrase "unavoidable casualty or misfortune" may include it is thoroughly settled by this and other courts that it does not include neglect on the part of the litigant or his counsel, since the former is responsible and is to be charged with the neglect of the latter, and the law demands the exercise of due diligence by both in the prosecution or defense of litigation. Kohlman v. Moore,
So concluding it necessarily follows that the court properly dismissed the petition in this case and refused to grant the new trial, and the judgment so determining is affirmed.