Alexander v. Hyland

45 So. 2d 739, 208 Miss. 890, 1950 Miss. LEXIS 312
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedApril 24, 1950
DocketNo. 37485
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 45 So. 2d 739 (Alexander v. Hyland) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Alexander v. Hyland, 45 So. 2d 739, 208 Miss. 890, 1950 Miss. LEXIS 312 (Mich. 1950).

Opinion

Smith, J.

In the January 1949 term of the Chancery Court of Warren County there were pending two suits between these parties, which involved the title to separate tracts of land, wherein appellee was complainant and appellant the defendant. The same attorney represented her in both causes. The first was tried and a final decree entered. The case at bar was continued by agreement, apparently because appellant could not prepare and file her answer until a survey of the lands in controversy had been completed. However, during the aforesaid term of court, friction developed between appellant and her then attorney, and he' disappeared from the case as such attorney, not being responsible for the later events.

The survey, it seems, was completed in February following, but when the succeeding April term 1949 arrived, appellant had filed no answer. This was, according to her version, in which she was corroborated by her husband, because her former attorney had told her the trial would not be had until the following September term of [893]*893court. The attorney denied that he so informed her. Nevertheless, there is no contradiction of her claim of having so understood him, even though he did not so inform her, in fact.

The surveyor was unable to complete his survey at the January term 1949 because he had been injured in a wreck. At the April term, according to the testimony of appellant and her husband he was still incapacitated. This testimony was not contradicted. She further testified that she would be ready for trial in the next term of court in September 1949, stating further that the absent surveyor would be a very valuable witness on the stand. Before the hearing in April of the matter in issue here, appellant had not employed another attorney, because in her judgment it was not yet necessary under the circumstances, and had made no preparation for trial otherwise.

The husband of appellant, during the aforesaid April term, learned accidentally that pro confesso and final decrees had been taken against his wife, the appellant, upon the occasion of his going into the clerk’s office to ask about papers in the case, indicating to the clerk that he and his wife were preparing to employ an attorney, start work on the. case, and put the survey in order, so as to be ready for trial, manifestly in September, according to their understanding. To his amazement, he then learned for the first ime of the aforesaid action of the court. He at once employed an attorney.

The decree pro confesso and a final decree had been signed by the chancellor on April 6th, the same being a day of the regular term. On April 20th, the attorney for appellee filed a motion asking leave of .the court to amend the final decree, in accordance with an amendment to the original bill allowed, according to the motion, between the first' decree and the motion- This motion was sustained on the same, day, and amendment imme[894]*894diately made to the final decree accordingly. Court had not adjourned the term.

The court was still in session when,- as stated supra, appellant learned from her husband what had taken place, and at once employed an attorney. He immediately filed a sworn motion to set aside the decree pro confesso, in which motion the events were recounted, and this averment made:

“And Movant shows that she has not been able to secure counsel up until this day, and that she has a meritorious defense to said suit.” The witnesses, including appellant’s former attorney, all testified without contradiction that she had a meritorious defense, but neither they nor the motion set out the matters constituting what such meritorious defense was. The purpose of the original bill was to cancel a claim to certain lands, allegedly asserted by appellant, as a cloud upon appellee’s title thereto, and, since she had not filed her answer, she also prayed that she be allowed a reasonable time in which to file an answer to the bill of complaint, and be granted a trial on the merits. There was no response filed to this motion, but the court proceeded to hear testimony upon it, substantially as above set out. Upon the conclusion thereof the court entered a decree overruling the motion, and appellant appealed here.

The attitude of this Court has always been favorable to trials on the merits, subject, however, to certain limitations. We have, also, in some early cases been quite strict in requiring a motion of the kind involved here, to be accompanied by the answer of the defendant, or a showing why it could be done, and a prayer for further time. Pattison et al. v. Josselyn, 43 Miss. 373; Pittman v. McClellan et al., 55 Miss. 299. Before those cases were decided we had Porter v. Johnson, 2 Howard 736, wherein the decree pro confesso was set aside on a motion detailing the merits of the defense, the Court saying [895]*895“Where it appears clearly that an application tends to the advancement of justice, courts should the more readily incline to favor it, and it appears to be the practice to set aside a default on affidavit of the merits and payment of the costs, when opportunity for trial has not been lost.”

This was followed by our opinion in the case of Fore v. Folsom, 4 How. 282, wherein we said: “if the defendant below makes affidavit that he has a meritorious defense to the action, showing what the merits are, that the court may judge of them, and makes his motion in time so as not to delay the trial, the court will, and should set aside a judgment by default, and allow a plea to the merits, . . .”.

In Yost v. Alderson, 58 Miss. 40, the defendant -filed with his motion to set aside the decree pro confesso, accompanied by his proposed answer, a statement of the reasons for failure to answer on time. However, we said in that case: “ It is argued that the cause shown was not good and sufficient; that mere inattention and forgetfulness cannot be a valid excuse for a failure to discharge a legal duty. This may be true when such inattention or forgetfulness has occasioned a failure which has been injurious to the adverse party, or the action of that party, based on such failure and caused by it, cannot be reversed without injury to him. But when the neglect is in the mere conduct of a suit, and its consequences do not operate injuriously, its condonation by the judge can do no harm except to deprive the adverse party of an advantage which he has secured in virtue of such neglect, and in that case the party guilty of the neglect should not on that account alone be deprived of the means and opportunity of maintaining or defending his rights. The object of the institution of courts is to administer justice according to law, and lawsuits are allowed for that purpose alone. Buies of procedure regulating the conducting of business in courts are instituted solely to [896]*896•facilitate these ends. They are necessary, and their due observance should be enforced by the courts. But it should not be forgotten that they are aids to secure the administering of justice, not shackles to bind courts to the perpetration of 'wrong. When their non-observance is in a trivial matter, working no injury to the adverse party and not materially impeding the due progress of the-cause, the fault should be corrected, and the authority of The court maintained rather by the imposition of costs and the use of other disciplinary agencies than by depriving parties of the opportunity of a fair trial, to secure which such rules are instituted.

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Bluebook (online)
45 So. 2d 739, 208 Miss. 890, 1950 Miss. LEXIS 312, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/alexander-v-hyland-miss-1950.