32 Cal. 634 | Cal. | 1867
The plaintiff, a corporation, sued the defendant for the price of goods, wares and merchandise sold and delivered to him, with interest thereon from a date specified. The summons, with a certified copy of the complaint, was served upon the
The plaintiff’s counsel has assigned as ground of error, on which he claims the order should be reversed, “ that the judgment entered by the Clerk was valid and the order setting it aside was erroneous.”
It was not objected by the defendant that the action was of a kind in which a default and thereupon a final judgment could not be entered by the Clerk under the conditions of the one hundred and fiftieth section of the Practice Act, if the conditions specified existed; but the reason assigned by the Court for its decision was that the Clerk’s action in the premises was without authority and void, because it was necessary for him to determine judicially: First—Whether the paper-purporting to be a bill of particulars was such in fact; second—When the same was served; and third—Whether it was duly served. The Court held the case of Willson v. Cleveland, 30 Cal. 198, to be decisive of the question, in which this Court said that the Clerk in entering defaults exercises no judicial
The account was furnished on the 26th of June, and on the 7th of July the default and judgment were entered. If the defendant was completely in default on that day, there can be no doubt of the correctness of the action of the Clerk, because the case was one authorizing such action in the event named. Then, was the defendant in default on the 7th of July? We are of the opinion he was. The demand for the account or bill of particulars was made on the 22d of June, and it was furnished four days thereafter. It was, as before observed, most general in form, but it is not pretended that any objection to it was made on that account or any other, until the motion to set aside the default was made; nor that any further account v?as ordered by the Judge. The fifty-sixth section of the Practice Act reads as follows : “ It shall not be necessary for a party to set forth in a pleading the items of an account therein alleged, but he shall deliver to the adverse party, within five days after a demand thereof, in writing, a copy of the account, or be precluded from giving evidence thereof. The Court or Judge thereof, or a County Judge, may order a further account when the one delivered is too general or is defective in any particular.” If the defendant was not satisfied with the bill of particulars furnished, his course, by the settled practice in such cases, was to apply to the Court or Judge for an order for a further account. (Dennison v. Smith, 1 Cal. 437; McKinney v. Kinney, 12 How. Pr. R. 24.) The bill of particulars rendered in compliance with the defendant’s demand, was “ for merchandise as per bill, $877 94.” This was as general as the complaint itself, unless the words “ as per bill,” might be regarded as a reference to an account
The order appealed from must be and is hereby reversed.
Mr. Justice Rhodes did not express any opinion.