Court Opinion

ID: 3890657
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2016-07-06 09:20:22.815688+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T14:15:34.739345
License: Public Domain

* Headnote 1. Equity, 21 C.J., Section 804.
A question of practice only is presented. A bill to recover alleged usury was filed May 31, 1919. A demurrer was filed August 12th following. The cause thus stood without action of any kind until October 30, 1925 — six years, two months and eighteen days — when motions were made and heard by the chancellor on the same day, by complainant to dispose of the demurrer, and by defendant to dismiss the suit, on the ground, first, that the sufficiency of the demurrer had been admitted by failure of complainant to set it for argument at the first term, which opened the first Monday in October, 1919, and, second, that complainant had been guilty of laches in failing to prosecute his suit. This appeal is from the decree of the chancellor dismissing the suit on both grounds.
Section 6204, being 4394 of the Code of 1858, under the chapter dealing generally with practice of the courts of chancery, reads: "At First Term. A demurrer or a plea shall be set for argument at the first term." Appellant insists that the obligation to move is not upon the complainant and the default not, therefore, his. Language in the section immediately preceding (Shannon's, *Page 359 
section 6203, Code, section 4393) is pertinent as indicating upon whom the burden of moving rests:
"If the plaintiff conceives any plea or demurrer to be naught, either for the matter or manner of it, he may set it down with the clerk to be argued; or, if he thinks the plea good but not true, he may take issue upon it and proceed to trial."
This appears to be a recognition of the plaintiff as the proper moving party. Under section 6204, the learned annotator in his note heading says, "Complainant admits sufficiency of demurrer or plea by failing to set it down for argument." He cites and substantially quotes from Montgomery v. Olwell, 1 Tenn., Ch., 184, 185:
"The true meaning of it is that if the complainant fail to set the plea or demurrer for hearing at the first term, the defendant has the right to consider the sufficiency of his plea or demurrer as admitted, and to act accordingly."
By his great learning and wide experience as a chancellor, and also by reason of his work in compilation of the Code of 1858, Judge COOPER was peculiarly fitted to construe the Code sections relating to practice in chancery. In the later case of Moses v.Brodie, 1 Tenn. Ch., 398, the learned chancellor incidentally, but quite clearly, reaffirms this view.
In Gibson's Suits in Chancery, generally recognized by the profession as high authority, the learned author, in sections 313 and 314, dealing with how and when demurrers are disposed of, refers to the Code section above quoted, requiring that a demurrer shall be set for argument at the first term, and seems to treat the complainant as the proper moving party. He says:
"A demurrer is a challenge by the defendant to the complainant to test the right of the latter to require an *Page 360 
answer to his bill; and the complainant can take no step forward so long as the demurrer remains undisposed of. If he thinks the demurrer good, but avoidable by an amendment to his bill, he can avoid it by amending his bill; if, however, he thinks the demurrer fatal to his case, the only course open to him is to allow the court to determine the sufficiency of the demurrer, or to dismiss his bill on his own motion. If, on the other hand, he thinks the demurrer bad, for any reason, he may demand the action of the court upon it, either when the case is reached on the docket, or at any earlier time allowed by the rules of the court."
The pronoun "he" repeated throughout this paragraph obviously refers to the complainant. Under a different section, Code, section 4320 (Shannon, section 6130), the burden of moving is shown by Mr. Gibson to be on the demurrant, when the demurrer is filed with an answer, citing Caruthers v. Caruthers, 2 Lea, 77, and Harding v. Egin, 2 Tenn. Ch., 3.
We are not impressed with the importance of the origin and source, stressed by counsel, of the Code sections discussed. They were brought into the Code of 1858, adopted by the legislature as a whole. There is no conflict in the provisions. Nor are we of opinion that the practice and the general acceptation of the bar has been so at variance with the construction of this statute above indicated as to have misled counsel for complainant. The expressions from Mr. Gibson and the note of the annotator in Shannon's Code, above quoted would seem to indicate that it has been generally understood to be the rule that a complainant admits the sufficiency of a demurrer by failing to set it down for argument. *Page 361 
It appears that in September, 1919, immediately following the filing of the demurrer, certain correspondence took place between counsel for complainant, who resided in Lawrenceburg, Tenn., and counsel for the defendant, looking to the setting down of the demurrer for argument, and it was contended before the chancellor, and is now insisted here, that the effect of this correspondence was to waive the statutory requirement that the demurrer be set down for argument at the first term. It will be noted that the initiative was taken in this correspondence by counsel for the complainant — this being in apparent recognition of the obligation resting on complainant to move in the matter. But however this may be, this correspondence is quite evidently directed to the October term of the chancery court, immediately following, and we do not find justification therein for the failure of counsel for complainant to take any steps within that term.
In view of what has been said, the action of the chancellor in dismissing the bill on the ground indicated must be sustained and the decree affirmed. The conclusion reached renders a discussion of the application of laches, being the second ground of the motion below to dismiss, unnecessary. *Page 362