Court Opinion

ID: 8655022
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-11-24 21:15:02.938184+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:56:40.057754
License: Public Domain

BART Olí, 0. J.
The appellant does not claim that the court committed error in the admission of evidence, or in its charge to the jury, but insists that it erred in proceeding to a trial of the cause without requiring the plaintiff, who had been shown to be a nonresident, to give security for costs, after demand made therefor by the defendant. It is urged that the action of the court in the premises amounted to a denial of a right of the defendant secured to it by legislative mandate. We are of the opinion that, under the circumstances of this case, this contention is not sound. The statute in section 3354, Bevised Statutes 1898, provides:
“When the plaintiff in an action resides out of the state, or is a foreign corporation, security for the costs and charges which may be awarded against such plaintiff, may he required by the defendant. When required, all proceedings in the action must be stayed until an under*464taking executed by two or more persons is filed with the clerk, to the effect that they will pay such costs and charges as may be awarded against the plaintiff by judgment, or in the progress of the action, not exceeding the sum of three hundred dollars. A new or an additional undertaking may be ordered by the court, or judge, upon proof that the original undertaking is insufficient security, and proceedings in the action stayed until such new or additional undertaking is executed and filed.”
Doubtless this section confers a right upon a defendant, to demand that the plaintiff, where he is a nonresident, to give security for costs, but such right is one personal to the defendant and one in which the public, or the state, has no interest. It, therefore, is not of a jurisdictional character and may be waived, and, in case of waiver, the court may proceed with the trial without making any order respecting such right. (State v. Mortensen, 26 Utah 312, 73 Pac. 562, 633.)
This statutory right, being thus a personal right, a mere personal privilege, may be waived by failure to make demand for security at all, or by failure to make such demand at a seasonable and within a reasonable time after it appears in the case, to the knowledge of the defendant, that the plaintiff is a nonresident. Where, then, the defendant, after the non-residence has been shown, makes no effort or no reasonable effort, to demand security until such time that the granting of his motion would cause a continuance of the trial, or delay the proceedings, or interfere with the business of the court, his laches may prevent him from asserting his right, for in either of such events the court may, doubtless, in its sound discretion, and as a matter of justice, refuse to grant an order requiring such security, and regard the right as waived.
“A defendant, in ease his adversary is nonresident, has an unquestionable right to security for costs, but inasmuch as it is a right which may be used to delay or obstruct justice, he should be required to insist upon it promptly, and to adhere to it persistently, or otherwise be held to have lost it.” (Shuttleworth v. Dunlop, 34 N. J. Eq. 488.)
That a defendant waives his right to security for costs, under statutes like, or similar to ours, if, without insisting on his right, he takes any step in a cause, after he has proper notice of the nonresidence of the plaintiff, we think is a well-settled rule of law. In 19 Ency. Pl. & Pr. 362, it is said:
*465“A motion for security for costs should be made at the first opportunity the party has after knowledge of the facts that entitled him to an order requiring security to he given, for, if not made promptly, the motion is liable to be denied by reason of the laches shown by one who is ■otherwise entitled to security.”
And on page 363, Id., it is said:
“If a party takes any steps in a cause, after notice of the facts that •entitle him to security, he waives his right to security for costs.”
In Goodrich v. Pendleton, 3 John. Ch. 520, it was said:
“The rule is that, if the non-residence of the plaintiff appears on the bill the defendant waives his title to security for costs if he takes any ■step in the cause, or even prays time to answer.”
So, in Brazell v. Cohn, 32 Mont. 556, 81 Pac. 339, it was observed:
“The record discloses that the court denied the stay upon the ground that the application for security was made too late. It was not necessary that the record show the reasons for the court’s decision. As the application for security for costs was not made until the day set for the trial, and no previous notice of such demand appears to have been given, the court was justified in denying the motion, and justified for the rea■sons which it gave— that it came too latethat is, that it was made immediately before the trial of the cause began, and without previous notice having been given.” (11 Cyc. 176 et seq.; 12 Abb. New Cas., 108; Swift v. Stine (Wash. T.), 19 Pac. 63; Stevenson v. N. Y., L. E. & W. R. Co. [sup.], 1 N. Y. Supp. 670; Fagan v. Strong [Sup.], 11 N. Y. Supp. 766; Smith v. Kahn [City Ct.], 42 N. Y. Supp. 478; Voss v. Sensenig, 14 Pa. Co. Ct. 631; Muldon v. Place [Ariz.], 6 Pac. 479; Dunning v. Dunning, 37 Ill. 306; Prince v. Towns [C. C.], 33 Fed. 161.)
In this case the defendant filed an answer on the merits without making any demand for security, although it was •specifically alleged in the complaint that the plaintiff was a nonresident — a resident of the state of Wyoming. Nor ■did the defendant serve and file any notice that it required security until the day when the case was called and when both parties were present in court and ready to proceed with the trial. Then, upon the attention of the court being called to the fact that demand was made for security for costs, one *466of the attorneys for the defense, addressing the court, among other things, said: “I do not want to work any hardship or interfere with the proceedings of the court,” and made no motion to suspend proceedings. Nor did the defense object or refuse to proceed with the trial, or further insist upon the right; nor did it object to' the impaneling of the jury, or except to the action of the court in proceeding with the trial. Under these circumstances the defendant must be held to have waived its statutory right. This case falls clearly within the principles hereinbefore referred to and stated, and the court did not err in its action in the premises. Nor, under the facts and circumstances revealed by the record, did the court err in overruling the motion for a new trial.
The judgment is affirmed, with costs.
McCARTY and STRAUP, JJ., concur.