Court Opinion

ID: 6641092
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-07-20 20:45:17.571622+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T15:59:14.505589
License: Public Domain

By the Oourt —
Flandrau, J.
— Under section 51, page 537, of the Compiled Statutes, a Defendant has the same time to answer a complaint after it is served upon him, that he had of unexpired time, when he served notice of appearance. In this case the summons was served on the 4th of October. The Defendant had until the 24th of October inclusive, in which to answer. Tie appeared in the action October 8th, by mail. The Plaintiff had until the 14th to serve his complaint. He served it on the 15th, and no objection was made. The Defendant at the time he appeared, had sixteen days left to answer in; he therefore had the same number of days after the 15th of October, the day when the complaint was served, which gave him until the 31st inclusive. He answered on the 29th and was in time.
The language of the statute is as follows: “And if the Defendant appear within ten days after the service of the summons, the Plaintiff must serve a copy of the complaint on the Defendant or his attorney within three days after the notice of such appearance, and the Defendant shall have at least ten days thereafter to answer the same.” The effect of this statute is to put it in the power of the Defendant to enlarge the time to plead in every case where he waits until the the tenth day after the service of the summons before appearing, unless the Plaintiff serves his complaint on the same day the appearance is made, which is practically out of the question where the attorneys live at different and distant points. The meaning of the act clearly is that the Defendant shall have as near his twenty days as he pleases to secure by a prompt appearance, and never less than ten, if he postpones *555it until the last day. It is quite similar to the practice in England, and in New York prior to the code, where the Defendant served an order for a bill of particulars of the Plaintiff’s demand. He had the same time to plead after the particulars were rendered as he had when the original order was served. Graham's Practice, 513; 8 Cow., 132; 13 East., 508. Or where oyer of a bond or deed was demanded. Graham's Practice, 521.
Where a Defendant pleads in time, as he did in this case, the Court has no discretion on the question of opehing up a judgment entered against him by default. A motion for this purpose is' not an appeal to the -favor ofi the Court, but an application for the enforcement of a right, and a denial of it may be reviewed in this Court. Where the answer is not in time, a motion for leave to plead is addressed to the discretion and favor of the Court, and not appealable unless such discretion is abused.
The answer in this case of a former suit pending, is not well pleaded. The facts which are alleged to have been pleaded in the former suit, did not constitute such a counter claim as would prevent the Plaintiff from discontinuing his action. The counter claim contemplated by the statute (Comp. Stat.,p. 541, sec. 71; id.,p. 554, sec. 170) must be one upon which an action can be maintained by the Defendant, at law or in equity. 10 How. Pr. R., 67, 71-2-3; 13 How. Pr. R., 248. The secret agreement between Eletcher and Cat-lin not to resort to the security, if it amounted to anything at all, was no more than a defence to the note by the indorser. It is difficult to see how that fact could have formed the basis for an affirmative proceeding either at law or in equity. It is quite doubtful whether it even constituted a good defence at law ; there was no consideration for the agreement, and Swift could have availed' himself of the security as well with the agreement as if it had never been made. Its existence certainly could not have been pleaded in defence of the mortgage either as against Eletcher or Swift, This being the only defence set up to the former suit, {folio 44, Paper Pooh,) there was no objection to the Plaintiff discontinuing it.
*556The other defence however entitled the Defendant to a judgment of dismissal upon the pleadings.
The act of March 8, 1860, page 216 of the Session Laws of that year, was evidently designed to compel parties whose demands were secured in the manner stated in the act, to proceed first to exhaust their securities before bringing suit upon the original claim. The assertion of such a power by the legislature, is warranted, and not in conflict with the constitution. It is merely regulating the order in which several remedies shall be pursued. The act says, if you hold a note or other personal demand, which is secured by mortgage or other collateral stated in the act, you shall not sue and obtain a personal judgment, until you have first resorted to your securities and exhausted them ; then an action may be maintained for any deficit.
The first section of the act is imperative “ that no suit shall be brought.” The second section permits the creditor to elect whether he will sue or not, but imposes the penalty of forfeiture of his securities as a consequence of bringing' suit. As long as parties are permitted by law to take securities by mortgage or otherwise, and are allowed by the constitution, “ a certain remedy in the laws for all injuries or wrongs which they may receive in their personal property or character,” they cannot be deprived by the legislature of proper and reasonable remedies upon all contracts which they may make, that are valid at their inception. Nor can the enforcement of one be made to depend upon the abandonment of another. At the time this note and mortgage were made, they were both valid in the law and the owner of them was entitled to a “ certain remedy ” to enforce them. The Legislature has the power to declare the manner or order in which such remedy shall be urged or employed, but not to enact that the execution of one shall be at the expense of the other. It is said however that the statute gives an election to the creditor which remedy he will pursue, and that on making his selection, if he chooses to bring his action on the original demand in the first instance, the forfeiture of the security is his own act, and not that of the legislature. ¥e think this argument, although specious, is sophistical. The legislature has no right, *557directly or indirectly, mediately or immediately, to-declare the forfeiture of contracts or even to impair tbeir obligation. It is the duty of that branch of the government to furnish to the citizens “ certain remedies for all injuries or wrongs, freely and without -purchase, completely and without denial, promptly and without delay,”in obedience to the constitution, and it is equally the duty-of the judicial branch to see that he is not deprived of them.
The legislature has reached the limit of its power in the first section, in prescribing the order in which creditors shall pursue their remedies. The second section, so far as it permits an election, is in conflict with the first, and also with the spirit of the act; and so far as it provides for the release and discharge of securities, it is in conflict with the Constitution of the United States, and of this State, which prohibit .the passage of any law impairing the obligation of contracts, and consequently is void.
The note being secured, and the Defendant being party to the note as indorser, the security was as much for his benefit as for that of the holder, and falls within the spirit of the law. The Plaintiff could not maintain a suit upon the note until he had first exhausted the mortgage.
Judgment reversed.