Court Opinion

ID: 8505038
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-11-23 01:26:15.703185+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:50:50.968304
License: Public Domain

Woods, J.
33y the fifth rule of July term, 1840, it is made the duty of the plaintiff, in a cause that has been referred to an auditor, to proceed to a hearing within ninety days ; and if he fail to do so the defendant should proceed before the next term.
The object of the rule was to secure a hearing before the term next after the order of reference, by charging each party successively with the duty of bringing it forward, and consequently with laches in case of a failure. It is the plaintiff’s fault if the hearing be not brought on within the first ninety days, and he cannot excuse himself by alleging causes that afterward intervene. After that, the initiative is upon the defendant, who can excuse him*44self only by causes operating after the expiration of the ninety days.
There is nothing, however, in the terms or the meaning of the regulation which precludes the defendant from proceeding within the ninety days, or the plaintiff from proceeding afterwards.
It provides that if the plaintiff fail to proceed within the ninety days, unless the defendant proceed to have the cause heard before the next term, the rule shall be discharged at such next term. But if it is executed in the mean time by the agency of the plaintiff, it shall not be discharged.
The defendant’s motion is founded upon the apprehension that the rule precludes either party from proceeding except within the time within which it is made his special duty to proceed. But we regard this view as erroneous. The exception to the report cannot therefore prevail.

Motion denied.