This аppeal was taken from a default judgment entered against appellant. We find that the judgment was erroneously entered and reverse.
Appellee Major Lewis, doing business as Major Lewis Livestock Auction Sales, filed its complaint against Ed Hall, W W Feeders a/k/a W W Cattle Company, and others, alleging that all the defendants were indebted to Lewis in the sum of $32,308.29 for cattle purchased as shown by a statement of account exhibited with the complaint. Hallous Garrett was also a plaintiff and alleged that Ed Hall was indebted to him in the sum of $2,100 for freight and hauling expense ’’surrounding” the purchase of cattle. It was alleged that Ed Hall was agent for W W Feeders a/k/a W W Cattle Company. Judgment in favor of the plaintiffs for $34,408.29 was sought against all defendants. This complaint was filed on August 6, 1975. An amendment to this complaint was filed August 15, 1975. In this amendment, the plaintiffs alleged that apрellant Leo Winters was a resident of the State of Oklahoma; that W W Feeders a/k/a W W Cattle Company was, in fact, Leo Winters d/b/a W W Feeders a/k/a W W Cattle Company; and that Leo Winters d/b/a W W Feeders was indebted to the plaintiffs in the sum of $34,408.29 for cattle sold and delivered to him and for which he had not paid. No other allegation was made as to the cause of action and no reference was made to the statement of account exhibited with the original complaint. The amendment contained these allegations:
That the plaintiffs should be allowed to amend their complaint to include the defendant Leo Winters as a party defendant.
That this court have jurisdicltion over the defendant by Virtue of his business dealing within the State of Arkansas personally and by his agents under Arkansas Stats. 27-2501 et seq.
Thereafter summons was issued and was served on August 20, 1975, uрon Winters by the sheriff of Oklahoma County, Oklahoma in that county, pursuant to Ark. Stat. Ann. § 27-2501 et seq (Supp. 1975). A few days prior to this service, Winters had been served with summons on the original complaint. According to the testimony of Winters and his Oklahoma City attorney, Winters had delivered the summons to which the original complaint was attached to this attorney, who then employed an Arkansas attorney to file an answer. This answer and a separate motion to dismiss were filed on behalf of W W Feeders a/k/a W W Cattle Company on September 10, 1975. The answer consisted of a denial that Ed Hall was agent for W W Feeders a/k/a W W Cattle Company, and a general and specific denial of each and every other material allegation of the complaint. The motion to dismiss was based upon allegations that W W Feeders a/k/a W W Cattle Company was not an entity that could sue or be sued.
On October 23, 1975, Leo Winters filed an answer, in “his own right,” in which he alleged that he had previously answered the complaint in the name of W W Feeders a/k/a W W Cattle Company. In this answer Winters denied that Hall was an agent for Leo Winters d/b/a W W Feeders a/k/a W W Cattle Company and generally and specifically denied each and every other material allegation of the complaint.
On December 19, 1975, the рlaintiffs filed a motion for default judgment, alleging that Leo Winters d/b/a W W Feeders a/k/a W W Cattle Company was served with a copy of the complaint and amended complaint on August 20, 1975, but that Winters had failed to file a timely answer to the complaint and amended complaint and a hearing was held on this motion on the day it was filed. It was granted. The judgment for $34,408.29 and interest was entered on January 16, 1976.
After the hearing, Winters testified that W W Cattle Company was not a corporation, but that he did business under both that name and as W W Feeders. He testified that he was served with summons and a copy of the complaint in Oklahoma sometime in August, 1975. He also admitted having been served a few days later on the same cause of action, but said that the pleading then served appeared to be identical to the complaint originally served on him and he so advised his Oklahоma City attorney. This attorney, Robert C. Grove, testified that he examined the pleading served on Winters with the second summons and since it appeared to him to be identical with the original complaint, he did nothing more, knowing that Arkansas counsel had already filed an answer to the complaint. Winters testified that the officer who served him with the summons at his office in Oklahoma City had apologized for bothering him again, saying that the summons was exactly like those previously served on him. The officer’s affidavit proving service states that he served the complaint in the case, but does not mention the amendment.
It clearly appears that the amendment added nothing to the original complaint except identification of appellant Winters as W W Feeders and W W Cattle Company. It seems clear that process on the original complаint was served on Winters although that summons and its return do not appear to be in the record. The amendment did not state any new or different cause of action or any new factual basis for the recovery sоught. The answer to the original complaint was timely filed. The second answer raised no issue not previously raised by the previous answer. It admitted the only new allegation which had been made by the amendment to thе complaint. This answer was never stricken, but seems to have been totally disregarded in awarding the default judgment, apparently on the basis that it was not timely.
The default judgment recites that Winters is indebted to Major Lewis d/b/a Major Lewis Livestock Auction Sales and Hallous Garrett in the sum of $34,408.29 with interest. The only witnesses who testified were Winters and his attorney Grove, neither of whom admitted the indebtedness. The judgment was based only upon the allegаtions of the plaintff’s pleadings and the unverified statements and cancelled checks exhibited with the original complaint, which was also unverified.
Default judgments are not the favorites of the law. Sharp v. Sharp,
This is not to say that our governing statutes leave as broad a latitude of discretion in the granting or denial of a default judgment as our courts once had, or that the effect of the statutes should be diluted or diminished. See Ark. Stat. Ann. § 29-401 (Repl. 1962); Moore v. Robertson,
For some reason appellee did not move to strike the answer of October 23 and did not move for a default judgment until December 19. This was virtually three months after they would have been entitled to judgment even if the Second service on Winters is considered as the date from which the time for pleading was to be determined and the first answer disregarded. It was nearly two months after Winters’ answer to the amended pleading was filed. When we consider the entire record, including the answer to the complaint, the limitation of the amendment to identification of W W Feeders, the admissions in Winters’ subsequent answer, and the lapse of time before a default was sought, we find that there was a waiver of strict compliance with the statutory requirements and that there was substantial compliance sufficient to bar a default judgment. See Utley v. Heckinger,
We hаve held that where there is some justification for a belief on the part of a defendant that he has filed a pleading meeting the statutory requirements a default judgment should not be granted. Barkis v. Bell, supra. See аlso, Arkansas Electric Co. v. Cone-Huddleston,
Even though Winters was sued under a trade name, we do nоt take that to be necessarily fatal to the cause of action or to permit the answer filed by W W Feeders to be ignored in deciding whether there was substantial compliance with statutory pleading requirements.
When a defendant is sued under a trade name, the complaint is amendable by alleging and asserting the true name of the individual doing business under that name. Manistee Mill Co. v. Hobdy,
Under our statute, the court may, in the furtherance of justice and on such terms as may be proper amend any pleadings by correcting a mistake in the name of any party, or when the amеndment does not change the claim or defense, by conforming the pleading or proceeding to the facts proved. Ark. Stat. Ann. § 27-1160 (Supp. 1975). It is consistent with both the spirit and letter of our statutes governing pleadings to сonsider, under the circumstances prevailing, that the amendment to the complaint in this case (which raised no new issue but simply corrected the name of the defendant) related back to the original complaint, so that a default judgment was barred by the original answer. If the bar of the statute of limitations may be avoided by such means, the declaration of a default should, by a similar treatment, be prevented.
The judgment is reversed and the cause remanded for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
