Arizona Mining & Trading Co. v. Benton

100 P. 952, 12 Ariz. 373, 1909 Ariz. LEXIS 108
CourtArizona Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 20, 1909
DocketCivil No. 1086
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 100 P. 952 (Arizona Mining & Trading Co. v. Benton) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Arizona Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Arizona Mining & Trading Co. v. Benton, 100 P. 952, 12 Ariz. 373, 1909 Ariz. LEXIS 108 (Ark. 1909).

Opinion

KENT, O. J. —

Benton brought suit in the court below against the Arizona Mining and Trading Company on a promissory note for $18,242.05 alleged to have been executed to him by the company, and to be due and owing from it. The summons was served on C. A. Overlook, the president of the defendant company, on May 12, 1908, and on the same day a pleading entitled an answer, verified by the said Overlook, as president of the company, was filed on its behalf, reading as follows, omitting the title of the court and cause: “Comes now the defendant, the Arizona Mining and Trading Company, a corporation, and, answering the complaint filed herein, admits as substantially true the material allegations thereof, and alleges that this defendant is unable at this time to pay the indebtedness set forth in said complaint, or any part thereof. "Wherefore this defendant prays judgment of this court in accordance with law.' Arizona Mining and Trading Company. C. A. Overlook, President.” On the same day the case was brought on for trial in the district court, and a judgment rendered in favor of the plaintiff for the amount of the note and interest, the said judgment containing the following recital: * ‘ Evidence is now introduced on behalf of the plaintiff, and it further appearing from the verified pleadings on file herein, as well as from said evidence, that the allegations of the complaint are true and proven, and the matter having been submitted to the court for finding and decision, and the court being fully advised in and concerning the premises, it is therefore ordered,” and so forth. On May 21st the defendant company, through its attorneys, filed a motion to vacate and set aside the judgment so entered, and for leave to file a proposed answer attached to the motion. The motion was based on the ground that the judgment was obtained by fraud and collusion, and that it was obtained upon an answer purporting to have been made on behalf of the defendant by Overlook, its president, admitting the truth of the allegations of the complaint, which answer was made collusively and fraudulently by Overlook at the instance and request of plaintiff [376]*376without any authority on the part of the defendant company to Overlook to appear in said action or file said answer, and alleged that the defendant had a meritorious defense to the action and the whole thereof, and had no notice of said action or opportunity to present its defense. The motion was supported by the affidavits of E. H. Lewis, W. F. Rudolph, and J. F. Ross. The affidavits of Lewis and Rudolph set forth that the board of directors of the defendant company consisted of themselves and Overlook, the president; that neither of the affiants had any knowledge or notice of the filing of the action or the rendering of the judgment therein, or of any service of any process on the corporation until after the judgment was rendered; that the directors of the company had never authorized Overlook to file an answer or appear in behalf of the corporation. They' further alleged on information and belief that Overlook was personally interested in, and a beneficiary of, the note sued on. The affidavit of Ross stated that he was at the county seat on the day the answer in the case was filed by Overlook, and that Overlook saw him there, and that though Overlook knew that Ross was the counsel and legal adviser of the board of directors of the defendant company, Overlook did not inform Ross of the filing of the action or the filing of the answer made by Overlook in the action, or disclose to Ross anything whatever concerning the action. The answer which the corporation asked leave to file was verified by Rudolph as one of the directors of the corporation, and denied that the promissory note sued upon by Benton was founded upon any consideration, or that there was any sum due Benton thereon fby the company, and affirmatively set forth matters of defense which, if true, were sufficient to defeat Benton’s claim. On the twenty-fifth day of May the plaintiff, Benton, filed in the office of the clerk of the court a reply to the answer sought to be interposed by the defendant corporation, setting up matters in contravention of the alleged facts set forth in said answer. A motion was made by the attorneys for the corporation to strike the reply from the files on the ground that it was prematurely filed, and that it appeared upon its face to be for the purpose of answering the allegations set forth in the defendant’s answer, and, as it went to the merits of the defense as alleged in the answer, was not a proper pleading or properly before the court upon [377]*377the motion to set aside the judgment in the ease. The motion to strike this reply from the files was denied hy the court. The president, Overlook, filed an affidavit, in which he stated that,.upon being served with the summons and complaint in the case, he believed it to he his duty to make such answer to the complaint as the facts would warrant, and for that reason executed and filed the answer therein; that it was not filed at the request of the plaintiff or his attorneys, hut in accordance with his own belief as to his duty in the matter; that he had no interest as to whether the plaintiff recovered on the note sued on in the complaint or not; that he did not know or believe that Ross was the counsel of the company. Upon the return day of the motion to set aside the judgment, the court took the testimony of a number of witnesses, and went fully, not only into the question of collusion and interest, hut also into the merits of the case, both as to the plaintiff Benton’s claim and as-to the validity of the company’s defense thereto, and at the conclusion thereof denied the motion, holding that the evidence showed that there was no want of consideration for the note; that there was no fraud or collusion between the president Overlook and the plaintiff or his counsel ; that the execution of the note was authorized by the directors of the defendant company; that the company obtained the money and used it to pay its running expenses; and that there was nothing in the evidence that would militate against the bona* fides of the claim or affect the consideration for which the note was given. The court further held that the answer filed by Overlook, the president, could not be considered as a confession of judgment in the case, since the case had been taken up upon the issue raised hy the answer filed and the judgment had been rendered after the taking pf evidence and upon a hearing on the merits, and further held that, as there was no possible defense to the action, the step taken by the president in admitting the debt was the wise course and merely a prudent business act on the part of the president for the corporation. The matter comes before this court upon an appeal from the denial of the motion to vacate and set aside the judgment.

We have deemed it desirable to set forth thus fully the record in the case as the situation is somewhat involved. The reply to the defendant’s proposed answer would seem to have [378]*378been prematurely filed. It did not controvert the allegations in support of the motion to vacate the judgment, but put in issue the matter alleged in the proposed answer in defense of the cause of action of the plaintiff. It properly had no place in the record, since no answer had been filed, but only an application to file an answer was presented. The court below heard a large amount of testimony covering all the phases of the case, and upon such testimony concluded that the defendant had no sufficient defense to the action, and that there was no fraud or collusion, and therefore refused to set aside the judgment, and permit the filing of such defense.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
100 P. 952, 12 Ariz. 373, 1909 Ariz. LEXIS 108, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/arizona-mining-trading-co-v-benton-ariz-1909.