Berry v. Sims

112 S.W.2d 25, 195 Ark. 326, 1938 Ark. LEXIS 1
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedJanuary 10, 1938
Docket4-4884
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 112 S.W.2d 25 (Berry v. Sims) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Berry v. Sims, 112 S.W.2d 25, 195 Ark. 326, 1938 Ark. LEXIS 1 (Ark. 1938).

Opinion

Baker, J.

This appeal is productive of a-certain degree of embarrassment for the court for two' reasons. (1) It is a controversy between two members of 'the bar involving criticisms of the propriety of certain conduct rather than leg’al rights freed of personalities. (2) Appellant’s abstract and brief present the conclusions of the writer instead of direct statements from the record and there are interpolations and comments therein--, by the writer which serve only to add to a marked'degree of confusion already present.

Berry and Sims formed a partnership in October, 1929, for the practice of law and accountancy in Little Rock. There is a dispute concerning provisions of the agreement between them. Berry alleges that Sims was to have the first $50 of profits each month, while Sims contends the amount was $75. Berry claims the partnership business was never settled, and sued for an accounting and for a dissolution. Sims denied these allegations and asserted a settlement of all partnership affairs, and that, thereafter, he left Little Rock and opened an office in Monticello, Drew county.

According to appellant’s abstract and brief he has filed in the Drew chancery court three separate- successive suits against the appellee and it is from a final decree dismissing the last of these that he. appeals. .

The matters for consideration here will be better understood if stated in the order of their occurrence, and without regard to their relative importance.

Appellant filed his first suit on May 8, 1933. Defendant filed answer thereto on June 12, 1933.- After the issues were thus joined, the cause stood on the docket until December 11, 1933, without any affirmative step having been taken by either party. Plaintiff did not make' ready his case for trial. On December 11, 1933, the court dismissed this suit for want of prosecution. It is urged now that this was a final judgment; that all later actions were res judicata. In the subsequent pro-ceéding's the appellee' did not plead this as a final judgment and conclusion under the rule of res judicata, but all parties seemed to have proceeded upon the theory that this dismissal was in the nature of a nonsuit.

Thereafter on June 20, 1934, the appellant filed a new complaint. The answer was filed on September 1, 1934, making up the issues. In this second suit certain interrogatories were attached to the complaint with the request that they be answered by the defendant. Defendant did not answer these interrogatories, and it appears that, upon an oral motion for an order requiring defendant to answer the interrogatories, the court heard certain testimony and denied the request of the plaintiff, appellant here. What these interrogatories were and what the evidence presented thereon was are not matters presented for our consideration and we must, and do, presume that the ruling of the court was correct in regard thereto; This is not, however, a vital question necessary for consideration upon this appeal, though appellant complains in that respect.

Thereafter, in open court, on December 10, 1934, an order was made to take depositions in the case for the reason that there was no court stenographer. Plaintiff should have proceeded in due course to take his proof. He knew that this order providing for the presentation of evidence by deposition fixed no time within which .this proof should be taken. Since there was no order of the court fixing the time for .the taking of the proof the law determined that question for the parties.

Section 4206, Crawford & Moses Digest, now 5218 of Pope’s Digest, provides that when no time is fixed by the court, the depositions in chief of the party having the burden shall be completed within forty days-after issue joined, those of the opposing party within thirty days thereafter, and depositions in rebuttal by either party within twenty days thereafter. That section also provides that-willful or negligent failure to take, proof within the time fixed by the court, or-,law, may be.,- in the sound discretion of the court', punished by'the' quashing of depositions taken out of time; provided,, that in the absence of. objection, or for good cause shown,the court may; permit such depositions to be read, or. may extend the time for taking same, the rights of. the opposing party being at the same time protected by appropriate orders. • t • ;

. - Plaintiff, however, did not take his proof as required by law.'-. After, the expiration of the forty days time," however, plaintiff served notice that he would take- depo-' sitions'on January 28, 1935. He did not do: that, and urges now, as an excuse, that the defendant, appellee' here, did not appear at the time and place of the taking of the depositions.

After plaintiff had given due notice of his -intention' to take depositions he . had a rigid to proceed. The defendant could not-be required to attend. He was privileged to exercise his own discretion in that respect, There' was no agreement about the taking of depositions, nor about the time of trial. ■ ¡ -.;

Thereafter, 'purported depositions of plaintiff and one witness were filed -with the clerk of the court on Jtme 25, 1935, fifteen days after a decree had been rendered by "the court on June 10, and at a time when plaintiff, who had the burden of procedure -upon him at all times, had negligently refused, or at least failed to be present. The depositions so taken without notice and out of time were without the statutory caption and- certificates and might properly have been suppressed if -filed prior to June 10, 1935,'when the case was tried. He urges now, as he did in regard to the order dismissing his first suit, that this decree on June 10,1935, because rendered "without notice having been given,-was a-nullity.

After making this assertion as to the invalidity of the decree he -cites § 6238, Crawford & Moses’ Digest, now § 8194, Pope’s Digest, as authority for his conclusions in that respect.

The appellant wholly misconceives the functions of the court, his own duties and obligations in regard to it in the preparation of his case when he has once invoked its jurisdiction. When he shall have set in motion the machinery of the courts, he must take notice of the con-venings and adjournments thereof and no obligation in law rests upon the defendant or any one else to apprise the plaintiff of the fact that courts Avill convene according to law at regular terms or at special or adjourned sessions.

It is true, courts may not serve the purpose of entrapping the unwary at special or adjourned sessions.. The court may cause notice to be given where it is deemed necessary to serve the purposes of justice, but plaintiffs, when once they invoke the jurisdiction of the court, must take notice of the regular or adjourned sessions thereof..

The defendant had a right to insist, when time within which to take proof had elapsed and when no proof was in fact taken, or at least, when depositions had not been filed in the office of the clerk of the court, that the trial should proceed.

The appellant urges that since the order was made to present the case upon depositions, that the defendant should- not have been permitted to present any oral testimony, but appellant first violated that order by refusing to take depositions and file same.

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Related

Prine v. State
590 S.W.2d 25 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 1979)

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Bluebook (online)
112 S.W.2d 25, 195 Ark. 326, 1938 Ark. LEXIS 1, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/berry-v-sims-ark-1938.