Baker v. Gaskins

36 S.E.2d 893, 128 W. Va. 427, 1946 W. Va. LEXIS 4
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 12, 1946
Docket9745
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 36 S.E.2d 893 (Baker v. Gaskins) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Baker v. Gaskins, 36 S.E.2d 893, 128 W. Va. 427, 1946 W. Va. LEXIS 4 (W. Va. 1946).

Opinion

Haymond, Judge:

This case is here on writ of error to an order of the Circuit Court of Doddridge County entered April 16, 1945, which vacated, set aside and annulled a judgment rendered by that court, in favor of the plaintiff, for $278.40, with interest and costs, on April 4, 1945, a former day of the same regular term of the court.

Twice previously this abtion has been reviewed by this Court. The first writ of error, by which the plaintiff sought to reverse an order of the trial court rendering judgment for costs alone in favor of the defendants, was dismissed, as having been improvidently awarded, for *429 the reason that, though ¿here was a directed verdict for the defendants, no judgment was entered by which the matters in difference between the parties were adjudicated. Baker v. Gaskins, 124 W. Va. 69, 19 S. E. 2d 92. Thereafter a second trial was had in the Circuit Court which resulted in a directed verdict in favor of the defendants, upon which a final judgment was entered. Upon the second writ of error to this Court, that judgment was reversed, the verdict was set aside, and a new trial was awarded for reasons stated in the opinion. Baker v. Gaskins, 125 W. Va. 326, 24 S. E. 2d 277.

The action originated before a justice of the peace and it is based upon a note in the principal sum of $132.00, dated October 8, 1926, payable to the plaintiff and signed by the defendants, W. F. Gaskins, E. A. Baker and Charles E. Baker, as makers. The defendants had been partners in a restaurant business which had been conducted in a lunch wagon owned by them in West Union, Doddridge County, West Virginia. Charles E. Baker, the husband of the plaintiff, and E. A. Baker are brothers. At the time the action was instituted on November 12, 1940, the plaintiff and her husband were living in Ohio and he was not served with process and has never made any appearance in the case, which has been prosecuted against the other two defendants. The note upon which the plaintiff bases her claim represents wages owed by the defendants to the plaintiff for her services while working for them at the lunch wagon for a period of eleven weeks at the weekly rate of $12.00. By its terms the note is to be paid in full when complete settlement is made of the lunch wagon business. The defendants sold the lunch wagon in 1938, thereafter disposed' of substantially all the property and the assets of the partnership, and, for a period of years, made no effort to settle the partnership accounts until after demand for payment was made by the plaintiff. Upon the foregoing material facts, here merely summarized, which are fully detailed and discussed in its opinion, this Court, in its second review of the case, construed the terms of *430 the note relative to the time of payment to require payment by the makers on demand after a reasonable time, reversed the judgment in favor of the defendants, and remanded the case for a new trial.

This action was again placed upon the docket of the Circuit Court of Doddridge County. On August 3, 1943, the plaintiff, by L. W. Chapman, her attorney, and the defendant, W. F. Gaskins, by P.. Douglass Farr, his attorney, appeared in the case and informed the court that they had agreed that the action be placed on the docket at the head of the list of civil actions pending upon appeal, for the purpose of having a definite date set for the trial at the next regular term of the court, provided that the parties should then be ready for triak The court approved the foregoing arrangement and entered an order which carried it into effect. Between the August, 1943, and the April, 1945, terms of the court, no action was taken in the case by any party. In the interim, Mr. Farr, the attorney for the defendant, W. F. Gaskins, entered the military service of the United States on November 27, 1943, and on December 9, 1943, by order of the court, he was granted a leave of absence for an indefinite period. He was still in the military service ^and consequently absent from his practice when the order of April 16, 1945, which is here under attack, was en-. tered.

On April 4, 1945, which appears to have been the second day of the regular April, 1945, term of the Circuit Court, the plaintiff, by her attorney, appeared and moved for trial of the case. The defendants, W. F. Gaskins and E. A. Baker, who had formerly appeared and made defense to the action, were not present in person or by counsel. They were thrice called at the bar of the court and, the defendants still not appearing, the plaintiff waived a jury, and the action was tried by the court in lieu of a jury. Upon the evidence introduced in behalf of the plaintiff, judgment was rendered in favor of the plaintiff and against the defendants W. F. Gaskins and E. A. Baker for $278.40, with interest and costs. Later *431 in the same term of court, on April 16, 1945, the defendant, W. F. Gaskins, appeared and moved the court to set aside the foregoing judgment. No grounds were specified in the motion, which was in writing, but the defendant, Gaskins, filed his supporting affidavit. This affidavit, after detailing some of the former proceedings in the case, urged as reasons for vacating the judgment of April 4, 1945: the agreement of August 3, 1943, already referred to, relative to the trial of the case at the next ensuing regular term of court, if the parties should then be ready for trial; the continuous absence of his attorney, Mr. Farr, in the military service, from November 27, 1943, to the date of the filing of the affidavit, as a consequence of which the affiant was without the services of any attorney; the lack of any notice or information by the affiant of any intention upon the part of the plaintiff to call the case for trial on April 4, 1945; and the absence of any knowledge by him of the existence of the judgment until several days after its entry. The plaintiff appeared and resisted the motion; but the court, on April 16, 1945, over her objection, granted the motion of the defendant, Gaskins, and, by order entered of record, set aside the judgment of April 4, 1945.

The action of the trial court in hearing the case and in' entering judgment in favor of the plaintiff at the April, 1945, term was regular in all respects and was fully justified in the circumstances disclosed by the record. The plaintiff, having instituted this action before a justice of the peace, had the right, upon appeal to the Circuit Court, to waive the jury and, in the absence of a demand by the defendants of trial by a jury, to have the case heard and determined by the court in lieu of a jury. Code, 50-15-9; Lambert v. Inter-Urban Motor Company, 99 W. Va. 135, 128 S. E. 81. The agreement, recognized by the court on August 3, 1943, in substance, merely placed the case at the head of the list of civil actions pending upon appeal and continued the trial until the next regular term of the court. To give it the effect of a continuing agreement that the trial of the case should *432

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Bluebook (online)
36 S.E.2d 893, 128 W. Va. 427, 1946 W. Va. LEXIS 4, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/baker-v-gaskins-wva-1946.