113 P. 472 | Mont. | 1911
delivered the opinion of the court.
In June, 1905, the Washoe Copper Company commenced an action in the district court of Silver Bow county against Michael A. Hickey and others to recover damages for trespasses upon certain real property and for an injunction to prevent the repetition of the trespasses. In its" complaint the- plaintiff
The principal question arises upon a construction of the order made by the trial court on June 21, 1909. That order was made upon the motion of plaintiff to set aside the judgment, open the default, and permit a reply to be filed. The order reads: “The court grants the said motion, conditioned upon plaintiff paying, within five days, all costs incurred by defendants since the filing of the second amended answer.” That the payment of costs was not intended to be a condition precedent to setting aside the default and judgment seems to us apparent: (1) The order is written in the present tense, and its effect is to set aside the judgment and open the default instanter. (2) The plaintiff was given five days within which to pay the costs. If the court intended that the payment of costs should be a condition precedent to opening the default and vacating the judgment, certainly language which more clearly expressed that intention could have been employed. (3) The amount of the costs was not specified. The judgment included five dollars costs; but the order includes all costs incurred by defendants since the filing of their second amended answer. Whether there were any costs other than the five dollars we do not know; but, in view of the language in which the order is couched, and other considerations hereafter to be noticed, it seems reasonable that the court intended that some claim for costs should be presented by the defendants who were in a position to know what costs they had incurred between the dates mentioned. (4) The court in effect construed its order as one operating in prcesenti: (a) As a part of the same order, the court granted the plaintiff five days within which to file its reply. If the default and judgment were not set aside, the plaintiff had no right to file a reply, and it is only upon the theory that the order was intended to act in prce-senti that there can be any justification whatever for the action of the court in granting leave to reply. Under this latter provision of the order, the reply might have been filed on the same day and immediately upon leave being granted—which
If we were compelled to construe the order setting aside the default as if it stood alone, we might experience some difficulty. The courts have not agreed as to the meaning of such orders. In each of the following cases, it was held that the payment of the amount mentioned was a condition precedent to the order taking effect: Gregory v. Haynes, 21 Cal. 443; Hartman v. Olvera, 49 Cal. 101; Sands v. M’Clelan, 6 Cow. (N. Y.) 582; Friese v. Homeopathic M. L. Ins. Co., 107 Pa. 134; Mabley v. Superior Court, 41 Mich. 31, 1 N. W. 985. On the contrary, in Dana v. Gill, 5 J. J. Marsh. (Ky.) 242, 20 Am. Dec. 255, the order read: “It is ordered that the nonsuit rendered herein be set aside, upon payment of costs.” The court said: “What effect, then, shall that part of the order have, which declares the nonsuit to be set aside, upon payment of costs? We answer: No other than to impose an obligation upon the plaintiff to pay the costs occasioned by his default, and, if he does not, it may furnish a good cause for attachment, to compel their payment or justify suing out execution for the amount. * * * Our construction of the order setting aside the nonsuit in this ease is that it is positive, and not contingent; and the language is that
In Gilliland v. Rappleyea, 15 N. J. L. 138, the order was: “That the verdict be set aside and a new trial granted on payment of costs.” The court said: “But the payment of costs, when it is ordered, is annexed as a condition upon which the party may have a new trial, and yet not strictly as a condition in such a sense that, if it is not performed, there shall be no new trial. It is rather an order on the party at whose instance the verdict has been set aside that he shall pay the costs of the first trial, which order, like other interlocutory orders, may be enforced by attachment.”
In People ex rel. Attorney General v. Murphy, 119 Ill. 159, 6 N. E. 488, the court said: “It is a familiar rule of construction that when the terms of an agreement are in any respect doubtful or uncertain, and the parties to it have, by their own conduct, placed a construction upon it which is reasonable, such construction will be adopted by the courts, in the event of litigation concerning it.” This rule may very well be said to be one of universal recognition. While it applies primarily to contracts and like instruments, we do not see any reason for its application to them which is not equally cogent for its application to an order of court. In fact, the supreme court of the United States appears to have laid great stress upon the theory of an order of court entertained and acted upon by the litigating parties in Ex parte Ransom v. City of New York, 20 How. 581, 15 L. Ed. 1000, where, in discussing a ease somewhat similar to the one before us, in the course of the opinion it said: “We concur in this view of the court, and we are also satisfied, from the course of the proceedings preparatory to the motion for the new trial, the hearing of that motion, and' the turning of the case into a bill of exceptions with a view to a writ of error, it was the understanding of both parties that the judgment of the 12th of December was to be considered as vacated.”
It has been the rule in this state for many years that: “When a cause has been tried upon a certain well-defined theory, neither party will be heard in this court, on oral argument, for the first
The plaintiff was defaulted by reason of its failure to file a reply within twenty days after February 23, 1909. When the order fixing that time was made, Michael A. Hickey, one of the defendants and a necessary party, had died. The authority of the attorneys for defendants to represent him ceased until there was a substitution of his administrator, which was not made until March 30. From the date of his (Hickey’s) death on January 28, until the substitution was made, there was not anyone upon whom service of a reply could be made so far as that defendant’s interest was concerned. Under such circumstances, plaintiff was entitled to a reasonable time at least, after the substitution was made, to serve and file the reply; but there was
Upon the entire record as presented, we think the trial court had, and now has, jurisdiction to try the cause upon the merits, and its further proceeding will not be restrained. The motion to quash is sustained, and the proceeding is dismissed.
Dismissed.