Plaintiff brought this action against the defendant insurance company (defendant) and its agent, Pittman. Pittman was served personally and defendant’s registered agent, Chamness, was served. Neither of them appeared, and an order of default and a default judgment were duly taken against them. Both defendants moved to set the judgment aside pursuant to ORCP 71B(l)(a). The trial court allowed Pittman’s motion but denied defendant’s. Defendant appeals, 1 and we affirm.
Defendant argues that it failed to appear because of mistake, inadvertence, surprise or excusable neglect by Chamness whose affidavit in support of defendant’s motion relates, as relevant:
“I do not deny being served with the Summons and Complaint in this case on January 30,1989, but my memory of it is not clear. As far as I can recall, I received the papers and followed my routine practice which was to give the Summons and Complaint to Susan Cusick, the office manager, or put it into her mail slot. She would then forward the papers to our home office in Springfield, Massachusetts. I believe I followed that procedure on this occasion.”
Cusick said in her affidavit that her routine practice after receiving a summons and a complaint was to forward them to defendant’s legal counsel in Massachusetts but that she did not recall receiving the papers in this case. Defendant also introduced the affidavits of persons in its home office and its counsel’s office. They described the procedures that defendant follows when it has been served with process and indicated that they had received no papers in this case.
The trial court analogized the circumstances to
Lowe v. Institutional Investors Trust,
Defendant relies,
inter alia,
on
Hiatt v. Congoleum Industries,
Defendant also argues that the trial court abused its discretion by denying relief to it while allowing relief to Pittman, when his was the direct misconduct, according to defendant’s understanding of plaintiffs allegations, and defendant’s liability could only be vicarious. We disagree. Pittman’s basis for seeking relief from default was entirely different from defendant’s. 2
Affirmed.
Notes
A final judgment was entered against defendant pursuant to ORCP 67B.
Defendant does not argue that the default against it is improper on the theory articulated in
Hiatt v. Congoleum Industries, supra,
and
State ex rel Everett v. Sanders,
