40 Ga. App. 387 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1929
(After stating the foregoing facts.) So far as this case is concerned, the defendant makes no attack upon the legal regularity of the trial or the validity of the verdict and judgment against him. He moves to set aside the judgment solely upon the ground that before the trial of the case it had been agreed between him and the plaintiff’s attorneys that the “suit would not
The trial judge, in passing upon motions to set aside judgments, has a broad discretion. It is a legal discretion, however, and can be exercised only upon legal grounds. Moore v. Kelly & Jones Co., 109 Ga. 798 (2) (35 S. E. 168); Kellam v. Todd, 114 Ga. 981 (41 S. E. 39). If there is no evidence which authorizes the setting aside of a judgment, a judgment setting it aside is illegal and can not be permitted to stand. If a defendant has been misled by opposing counsel and thereby induced to refrain from attending the trial and defending the suit, either in person or by attorney, the setting aside of the judgment rendered against him under such circumstances might be sustained if it were based upon meritorious and legal grounds. Where, however, a defendant, without having been misled by the plaintiff, or by any one with supposed authority to speak for the plaintiff, into believing that a trial would not be had and that it would not be necessary for the defendant or his counsel to be present in court on the date set for the trial, but where the defendant knew that the case had been set for trial on a certain date in the future, and relied upon a mere executory agreement of settlement which had not been accepted by the plaintiff in accord and satisfaction, and therefore would not amount to a settlement of the case until the sum agreed, on had been actually paid to the plaintiff or some one authorized to receive it in the plaintiff’s behalf, the defendant was not deceived and induced to refrain from appearing at the trial, either in person or by his attorneys, and therefore has no meritorious ground upon which to set the judgment aside.
We have produced in the statement of facts the salient portions of the testimony relating to the ground upon which is based the motion to set aside the judgment. Taking the defendant’s own testimony and that of his attorney, without reference to the testimony adduced by the plaintiff, there is found nothing to authorize the conclusion that the defendant was deceived by any one representing the plaintiff or who the defendant might suppose represented the plaintiff, and thereby induced to believe that the case would not
Thus it appears from the defendant’s own testimony that he, several days beforehand, was aware of the date upon which the case was set for trial. It also appears from the testimony of the defendant’s counsel, Mr. Wright, that he was present at the July, 1928, term of the court, and the case was continued to September 17, 1928, by special order of the court, and that Mr. Wright conferred with the defendant about ten daj^s prior to September 17, 1928 (the day upon which the judgment was rendered), with reference to the trial of the case, and that the defendant then informed
Under the defendant’s own testimony and that of his counsel, there appears no ground which could legally authorize the trial judge to set aside the judgment rendered against him.
Moreover, it appears from other undisputed testimony, that when Mr. Lewis had the conversation referred to with the defendant, Mr. Lewis’s connection with the plaintiff as attorney had been severed, and that this fact had been made known to the defendant. Mr. Lewis, in his testimony, stated that prior to the time when associate counsel at the July term, 1928, had the case set for trial at the September term, he surrendered to the associate counsel all the papers relative to “the trial” of the case. Neither Mr. Lewis nor the defendant testified that, in the conversation which they had a few days prior to the date of the trial, Mr. Lewis, in dealing with the defendant, was acting in the capacity of attorney for the plaintiff. Nowhere in Mr. Lewis’s testimony did he claim to be attorney for the plaintiff or that he so acted when he had the conversation referred to with the defendant upon the eve of the trial of the case. The defendant, therefore, in dealing with Mr. Lewis, must have known that Mr. Lewis at the time was not of counsel for the plaintiff.
The defendant is a highly honored and respected official of this State, and he enjoys the unbounded confidence and esteem of every one, including the judges of this court. We are satisfied that in whatever he did he acted in the best of faith. Under the undisputed evidence, which we have carefully reviewed, we can only come to the conclusion that there was presented to the trial judge no meritorious ground upon which the judgment could be legally set aside. The trial judge therefore erred in setting aside the judgment.
Judgment reversed.