104 Utah 731 | Utah | 1909
Tbis action was begun in tbe district court of Salt Labe County to recover for money bad and received. Tbe complaint was filed October 18, 1906, and’ on November 19,' 1906, summons was served on defendant James Donaldson. Tbe other defendants were not served witb process, nor did they appear in tbe action. On October 2, 1907, nearly a year after tbe service of summons, judgment by default was rendered in favor of plaintiff and against defendant Donaldson for tbe sum of $1353.38. On October 12, 1907, Donaldson moved tbe court to set aside tbe default and vacate tbe judgment, and permit him to file an answer which be presented in connection witb bis motion. He filed several affidavits, and introduced oral testimony in support of tbe motion. Counter affidavits were filed by plaintiff. Tbe court overruled tbe motion, and Donaldson appealed.
Tbe facts leading up to and surrounding the entry of default and tbe rendering of judgment thereon, and tbe grounds upon which Donaldson relied to have the judgment vacated and tbe case reopened, as shown by tbe files in tbe case and tbe affidavits presented' and the testimony introduced at the bearing on tbe motion, are as follows: On or about September 19, 1906, plaintiff, in company witb bis brother, Alexander McWhirter, visited a certain rooming bouse in Salt Lake City, Utah, and engaged in a game of cards called “stud poker” witb tbe defendant Donaldson. Tbe money sued for in tbis action was bet and lost by plaintiff and won by Donaldson. Tbe McWhirters employed M. P. Braffet, an attorney at law, to commence tbe action, and take whatever steps be might deem necessary to recover tbe money bet and lost on tbe game of cards referred to. Before tbe complaint was filed, it was discovered that
The specific grounds upon which the motion is based are not set out in the notice. We assume, however, from the matters stated in the affidavits filed in support of the motion, and the manner in which counsel have discussed the subject-matter of the appeal in their printed briefs) that they base their right to have the default and judgment set aside upon one or more of the statutory grounds, namely, “mistake, inadvertence, surprise, or excusable neglect.” We think, however, in view of the matters set forth in the affidavits, that the only ground which can be urged with any degree of consistency is that of “excusable neglect.” No claim is made that the court was without jurisdiction, nor that the judgment is tainted with fraud, nor that it was illegally entered. The general rule is that a motion to vacate a judgment entered by default on the ground of excusable neglect and permit the party against whom it is entered to plead to the merits is addressed to the
In the case of Borkheim v. N. B. & M. Ins. Co., 38 Cal. 623, the Supreme Court of California, in construing a statute identically the same as the one under consideration here, said:
“It declares such agreements null and void unless they are in writing and filed with the clerk or have been entered in the minutes of the court. Of such agreement, therefore, there can he no specific performance. To allow the court to enforce them, as was done in. this case, against the will or without the consent of the parties, is to allow the court to work the precise mischief which the statute was designed to prevent. Instead of being nullified in that way, the statute -ought to he strictly adhered to, for it is the dictation of wisdom. Without it the court would be frequently annoyed by disputes between counsel concerning their agreements, and thus forced to try innumerable side issues more perplexing than the case itself, attended, also, with delay to its business, and the detriment to the public service.”
“It was tlie duty of tide district judge to enforce the rule, and he erred in overruling the objections to the testimony in relation to the verbal stipulation. It is not a case where the question was left to his discretion. There was a positive statute, a rule prescribed and adopted by this court for the government of the district court which could not be disregarded. . . . They (the defendants) knew that such an agreement did not, under the statute and rule of court, have any binding effect. . . . They knew that in the condition in which the litigation was the plaintiff had the legal right to at any time apply to the clerk for a default. If his attorney refused to act, he could, as was done in Goben v. Goldsberry, supra (72 Ind. 46), have discharged him and employed another attorney and instructed him to have the default taken. . . . The shield furnished by the law was ample for the protection .of their rights, and, if they did not want a default to be taken, they should have availed themselves of its clear, wise, and beneficial provisions, instead of trusting to the uncertain memory of counsel or the instability of plaintiff’s professed friendship towards one of the defendants. In the application and enforcement of the statutory provisions, it has been held that a party is not authorized to rely upon an oral agreement of the opposing attorney for a new trial upon the ground of surprise; that it is a want of diligence to rely on a verbal stipulation which is not binding. Patterson v. Ely, 19 Cal. 35. . . . The order of the district court is reversed.”
In tbe ease of Martin v. De Loge, 15 Mont. 343, 39 Pac. 312, a district court set aside a default on tbe ground tbat it was taken in violation of an oral stipulation made out of court. There was a rule of tbe district court wbicb provided tbat no agreement between tbe parties or tbeir attorneys relating to any cause would be regarded by tbe court unless reduced to writing or made in open court and
Section 133, Comp. Laws 1907, provides that “no practicing attorney and counsellor shall become surety in any civil or criminal action, suit or proceeding which may be instituted in any of the courts of this state in which he is engaged as attorney.” Now, this statute ‘
In Love v. Sheffelin & Co., 7 Fla. 40, a case often cited with approval by both courts and text-writers, it is said:
“A suitor of tlie court is entitled,' to a ,fair and impartial hearing, and to every facility consistent" with legal provision for the assertion and maintenance of his rights, or their defense and protection; this especially from the officers of the court. Suppose, however, that they connect themselves with one or other of the parties, hy signing a bond to maintain his Suit and discharge any liability that may devolve on them, to pay whatever judgment the court may award, what is their position, and that of the case? Is not this officer pledged by his fortune to "the suit to the side to which he has committed himself? Is not his personal influence drawn and forced into the same channel, and has not his adversary to encounter all this, either in defense or as complainant, in the assertion and maintenance of his rights? Is not the contest widened and extended by such action, and does it not henceforth cease to be between the original parties? We do not stop to consider the possibility of this influence being willfully exerted. There is no proof or suspicion of the kind in the case. It is sufficient that such action has the tendency to defeat and obstruct the course of justice, and may be 'pernicious and injurious to an extent not easily estimated.”
Tbe case at bar is a good, illustration, of the wisdom of the rule which precludes an attorney from becoming surety for his client. Braffet, in his testimony on the hearing of the motion to vacate the-judgment and set aside the-default, stated that -one reason why he delayed in filing an amended "complaint was that he desired to minimize his obligation as surety on the attachment bond. To quote him literally, he said: “It (the amendment) involved the question of the attachment, and I was on the attachment bond and had guaranteed the other surety, and wanted to minimize the amount of the obligation.” And again he said: “At the time of the filing of the • complaint, I was ■ not exactly satisfied to sue for this amount and was largely
There is another reason why appellant is not entitled to have the case reopened. No principle of law is more firmly established, nor more strictly adhered to', than that which prevents the setting aside of a judgment to
The judgment is affirmed, with costs.