114 Ark. 493 | Ark. | 1914
This is a proceeding by M. C. Trumbull under the seventh subdivision of section 4431 of Kirby’s Digest to set aside, after the expiration of the term, a judgment by default which had been rendered against him in favor of William Harris. The facts are as follows:
In 1907 M. C. Trumbull and A. Danville were partners under the style of Trumbull-Danville Lumber Company and they entered into a contract with William Harris to cut a tract of timber which they owned. Harris sued them for a breach of the contract. The Bear State Lumber Company, a corporation, bad absorbed the assets of the Trumbu'll-Danville Lumber Company and was later made a party defendant to the action. The case progressed to judgment against all of the defendants and judgment was rendered in the circuit court against them in favor of the plaintiff Harris. The case was appealed to the Supreme Court and in an opinion delivered March 18, 1912, the judgment was reversed and the cause remanded for trial. After the ease was remanded it was set for trial on the calendar of the Montgomery Circuit Court at its August term, 1913, which term began on the 4th day of August.
Some time between the 13th and 22d day of July, 1913, M. C. Trumbull went to the State of New York to visit Ms father. On the 10th day of August, 1913, he wired the attorney of the Bear State Lumber Company to telegraph him at once if it was necessary for him to return to Arkansas for the Harris trial. He left next day for Mount Ida, the county seajfc of Montgomery County, but, on account of being delayed by a freight wreck at a point in Illinois, he missed Ms connection and did not reach Mount Ida until the 15th of August. The circuit court adjourned on the 15th and judgment by default had been rendered against him in favor of Harris on the 14th of August. The Bear State Lumber Company was represented by an attorney, but the plaintiff Harris dismissed Ms cause of action against it and took judgment by default against Trumbull.
Trumbull testified that is was sixteen hundred miles from Bath, New York, to Mount Ida, of Montgomery-County, Arkansas; that if he had not missed his connection he would have arrived at "Womble at noon on the 14th of August; that Womble was only nine miles from Mount Ida; and that he could have appeared there that afternoon for the trial, the case being set for trial on that day. He .also stated that he did not know that court convened until the 14th day of August, which was on Thursday. He said that he was delayed in New York on account of the illness of his father who was a very old man and had been injured by a speeder .striking him while on the railroad track. He also testified to a state of facts to show that he had a meritorious defense to the action brought against him.
On the other hand, the manager of the Bear State Lumber Company testified in favor of William Harris substantially as follows: I have been manager of the Bear State Lumber Company since August, 1909. Prior to that time M. C. Trumbull was -its manager and owned stock in it. When I became manager Trumbull sold his stock and retired from the company. I retained the same lawyers who had been employed in the case of Harris v. Trumbull-Danville Lumber Company and the-Bear State Lumber Company. In the summer of 1913 Trumbull was talking about going to New York to visit Ms father, and I told Mm that he was a party to the Harris suit and that he could not afford to go away and not be present at the trial. I further told him, that Harris had said to me that if he obtained judgment he was going to get as much out of Trumbull as he possibly could and then call on the Bear State Lumber Company for the balance. I insisted on Ms remaining here for the trial. He told me that he had made his arrangements to go away and that he would not remain.
On July 24, Trumbull wrote one of the attorneys for the Bear State Lumber Company that , he had received Ms letter of the 17th of that month and asked Mm if he could not have the Harris case continued until the next term, or, .if he could not do that, if he could not take Ms deposition in the case as he did not want to come back to Arkansas, until about the middle of September.
One of the attorneys for the Bear State Lumber Company also told Trumbull, before he went to New York, that he would be needed at the trial. Trumbull asked Mm if he could not take his deposition ¡and the attorney replied that he could not, that Ms presence would be necessary.
It was also shown in evidence, in behalf of Harris, that when Trumbull .arrived at Mount Ida un the 15th day of August before the court adjourned he was permitted to file a motion for a new trial and in that motion he set up all the tMngs wMdh appear in the record in the present ■suit and proved substantially the same facts in regard to his absence that are now proved. The court refused to grant .him ia new trial. He appealed to the Supreme court, and in January, 1913, the Supreme Court'dismissed his appeal.
Upon this record the circuit court made a finding in favor of Harris, and Trumbull has appealed to this court from the judgment dismissing his application to set aside the judgment which was rendered against Mm in favor of Harris at the August, 1913, term of the Montgomery Circrnt Court.
His visit to New York was not occasioned by his father being struck by a speeder. He had determined to make the visit before that occurred and the accident that happened to his father was in no wise responsible for his visit.
In the case last cited the court said: “The statute to vacate judgments by this proceeding is in derogation not only of the common law, but of the very important policy of holding judgments final after the close of the term. 'Citizens must have confidence in the judgments of our official tribunals as settlements of their controversies and there should be some end of them. Unless a case be clearly within the spirit and policy of the act, the judgment should not be disturbed.”
The judgment will be affirmed.