Court Opinion

ID: 6685617
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-07-20 21:32:23.150929+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:00:57.535407
License: Public Domain

Fuller, P. J.
This is an appeal from an order overruling a motion to vacate a judgment entered upon a retrial which took place on the 28th day of Febi’uary, 1899, in an action to recover Hie amount of a promissory note executed by appellant to Moriz Levinger, and before maturity transferred by indorsement to respondent bank. As a complete defense it is alleged in the answer that the only consideration for the note was malt beer purchased by appellant from Levinger to be sold as a beverage in violation of law, and at the time of the purchase of said note respondent well knew that the same was without consideration other than such intoxicating liquor, fo be sold m this state in violation of the constitution and laws thereof. Although it appears from the undisputed evidence inlroduced at the former trial that the beer was manufactured by and purchased from the Sioux Falls Brewing Company, with which Levinger was not shown to be in any way connected,' the court on the 23d day of January, 1898, rendered judgment dismissing respondent’s complaint upon its merits, with costs in fayor of ap*20pellant. Thereafter respondent made application for and obtained a new trial in circuit court, and at the September, A. D. 1898, term the case was again placed on the trial calendar. Appellant’s attorney, F. L. Soper, who had conducted the case from the beginning, resisted the motion for a new trial; and, while he, testifies that appellant knew the. same had been granted, he was not advised that the case had been set for trial. We think from the evidence that the trial court was justified in finding that appellant and his attorney, Mr. Soper, formally severed their relations as attorney and client in December, 1898; and it is conceded that no other attorney had been substituted prior to the February term, 1899, when the judgment now sought to be vacated was entered. Although appellant knew that a new trial had been granted, he failed to retain other counsel, removed from the county, and appears to have paid no further attention to the action. Consequently, when the case was called for trial he was not present. Mr. Soper declined to proceed with tlie defense, and the case was tried to the court, resulting in the judgment which the court declined to set aside.
According to the affidavit of appellant upon which the motion to set aside the judgment is based, F. L. Soper. Esq., was his attorney employed, on a salary, to look after all matters requiring attention, until February, 1898, when a settlement was had between them, and Mr. Soper was discharged, lie further states “that some time in the summer of 1898 said Soper advised him that a motion for a new trial’had been made and argued, but that said Soper never at any time since then gave him any information regarding this case, and he supposed that the motion had been either taken under advisement or *21been denied.” Whether appellant discharged his attorney, as he states, in February, 1898, or not until December of that year, as shown by the affidavit of Mr. Soper, who further testified that he notified appellant that a new trial had been granted, it is very evident that respondent was never advised that Mr. Soper had been discharged, nor was any substitution ever made, and appellant was manifestly negligent in the matter. Having been informed by Mr. Soper that a new trial had been granted, and having according to his own testimony, discharged his attorney in the case long prior thereto, it was his duty to procure counsel; and the fact of his being advised that the case could not be again placed on the trial calendar until a new notice of trial and note of issue had been served and filed could, under the circumstances disclosed by the record in no manner tend to mislead him. In the case of Evans v. Fall River Co., 4 S. D., 119, 55 N. W. 862, we say: “A motion to vacate or set aside a judgment- under the provisions of Section 4939, Comp. Law’s, is addressed to the sound legal discretion of the trial court ou the particular facts of the case, and its action in the matter, whether of allowance or refusal, will not generally be disturbed by tlie appellate court unless there is a manifest abuse of such discretion.”
As previously noticed, it is alleged in the answer that Moriz Levinger, to whom the note was executed and delivered by appellant, was engaged in the business of selling malt beer, and that he purchased of such payee named in the notea quantity of such beer, which constituted the only consideration therefor; while the undisputed testimony of appellant shows that the note was given in settlement for malt beer purchased from and manufactured by the Sioux Falls Brewing Company. *22The averment of the answer is that the note is void because the consideration therefor was intoxicating liquor sold by Moriz Levinger in violation of law, and, when a specific sale made by a particular person is relied on, proof that the sale was made by a different person is a fatal variance, and constitutes no defense to such an action. In the case of Hurlbut v. Bagley (Iowa) 68 N. W. 585, the court, in a headnote fully sustained by the opinion, say: “In an action on notes given for goods sold, defendants alleged that the notes were invalid because the consideration was, in whole or in part, intoxicating liquors sold by plaintiff in violation of law. The evidence failed to show any such sales by plaintiff, but showed such sales by W. to plaintiff. Held, that there was a fatal va riance.” Courts are usually reluctant to set aside a judgment regular on its face, and reinstate an action, unless a meritorious cause of action or defense is shown; and when it appears that the undisputed evidence offered at a former trial in no manner tends to establish the defense pleaded, and the finally defeated litigant has been negligent, his motion may very properly be denied. Gauthier v. Rusicka (N. D.) 53 N. W. 80; Story v. Weaver, 66 Ga. 296. While the applicant is not required to make more than a prima facie showing on the merits, and affidavits to controvert his affidavit of merits are inadmissible, as held by this court in Oil Co. v. Lee, 1 S. D. 531, 47 N. W. 955, when as in this case, the motion is based on files and records tending affirmatively to show that he has no defense upon the merits, a very different question is presented. The court was fully justified in concluding from the record and affidavit of Mr. Soper that appellant was not prevented from making his defense in tlm action by any mistake, accident, or *23surprise due to the negligence, default, or misrepresentation of his counsel, and that his failure to employ an attorney and appear at the trial was the result of his own inexcusable negligence. Surely the failure of an attorney to appear at a trial and interpose a defense, even though a valid one exists constitutes no ground for disturbing a judgment, when such attorney has been previously discharged, and his former client not misled by any statement of his made either prior or subsequent to the severance of their relations. The case of Searles v. Christensen, 5 S. D. 650; 60 N. W. 29, was in every material particular different from this. There the defendant, upon being" sued, immediately employed an attorney to represent him in the case, and thereafter retained additional counsel. At the time the case was set for trial he appeared at the court house, and was then and there informed by his attorneys that the action against him had been discontinued. Relying upon this statement, as be had a right to do, he returned to his home, in another county; and judgment was rendered against him at the same lerm, although ho appears to have had a meritorious defense. It follows from what we have said concerning the law and facts that there was no manifest abuse of that sound legal discretion with which the trial court was vested, and the order appealed from is affirmed.