Court Opinion

ID: 3941340
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2016-07-06 10:05:02.872513+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T07:43:23.809700
License: Public Domain

J. Bleeker and wife brought this suit originally against George Watson, individually, alleged to be "doing business under the trade-name of Watson Company, Builders," and judgment against Watson was rendered, but was reversed on appeal because of defective service. It was disclosed in the proceeding that Bleeker's cause of action was in fact against Watson Company, a corporation, and not against Watson, the individual, who was the president of the corporation. By an amended petition, which was lost and not substituted as provided by statute, Bleeker impleaded the corporation, but no service was had or attempted upon the latter. The court nevertheless rendered judgment by default against the corporation, which has appealed. The record is very unsatisfactory, and but vaguely shows the course of the procedure.
What purports on its face to be a "carbon copy of plaintiff's first amended petition" is copied in the transcript, with the notation by the clerk that it was "not filed." The instrument, then, is without verity, and cannot be considered as a part of the record; and, as the record shows affirmatively that the case was tried without any filed pleading against the corporation, the original thereof having been lost and not substituted, the judgment is without pleadings to support it. The pleading having been lost, it was the duty of the pleader to provide a substitute therefor and procure its filing among the papers in the case as a part of the record. This could have been done either by agreement of the parties (article 2159, R.S. 1911), or by motion under the statute. Articles 2157, 2158, 2160. But the substituted pleading cannot be given "the force or effect of the original," unless it "be filed with the clerk." Article 2163.
The record shows that the corporation filed no pleadings and made no formal appearance in the case. The answer of Watson, the individual, in which he set up that he had had no dealings with appellee, but that the contract sued on was made by the corporation, cannot be construed as a pleading or appearance by the corporation. Nor does the *Page 638 
fact that the corporation is now represented by the attorneys who appeared for Watson, the individual, have the effect of an appearance for the corporation. The fact that the same counsel appeared, successively, for the two parties, has no legal significance. These attorneys did not appear for the corporation until this judgment had been rendered against it, when they appeared and filed a motion for new trial in its behalf. Appellees contend, and the trial court appears to have proceeded upon the theory, that the pleadings of Watson, the individual, and the appearance and acts of his attorneys, who subsequently appeared for the corporation, constituted an appearance in behalf of the latter. And upon this theory the trial court held that the corporation had appeared, when in fact it had made no appearance by pleading, by counsel, or otherwise. The result was that a judgment was rendered against the corporation without issuance or service of process against it, and in the absence of any appearance by it. No matter how meritorious a cause of action appellee may have against appellant, the latter is entitled to its day in court thereon.
The judgment is reversed, and the cause remanded.