Brock v. Ellsworth State Savings Bank

192 Iowa 1042
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedJanuary 10, 1922
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 192 Iowa 1042 (Brock v. Ellsworth State Savings Bank) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Brock v. Ellsworth State Savings Bank, 192 Iowa 1042 (iowa 1922).

Opinion

Preston, J.

i judgment- set-fínñt-^violation of stipulation. The default judgment against defendant was for about $1,200 or $1,300. This suit was brought February 5, 1915, to recover of the defendant $1,000 and interest, for money deposited with defendant, with other papers, in a lan(l trade of some magnitude. The $1,000 was deposited with the other papers in escrow. It was claimed that the money and papers were deposited with one Craigwiek, who, as an officer of the bank, accepted the papers on behalf of the bank, for the purpose of holding for plaintiff; that, in violation of the trust, the bank surrendered the title papers and the money deposited. Plaintiff was then represented by Jordan & Jordan, of Des Moines. On the same day that this suit was brought, another case was filed by the Farmers Savings Bank against Ellsworth Milling Company, which was a foreclosure suit in which this plaintiff was intervener, the question, as we understand it, being whether the savings bank or this plaintiff had the prior claim to the papers, because this plaintiff alleged that the defendant herein had wrongfully delivered the papers to the savings bank. Mr. Henderson, attorney for the defendant herein, at that time agreed to represent plaintiff, Brock, locally, but soon afterwards withdrew from the other [1044]*1044case, because of conflicting interests between Brock and this defendant. Mr. Henderson has, at all times, represented this defendant in the instant case. A few days thereafter, February 16, 1915, a written stipulation in the instant ease was signed by one of the Jordans for plaintiff, and by Mr. Henderson for defendant, to the effect that plaintiff, Brock, proposed to intervene and assert his rights in the other case; that said intervention should be without prejudice to either party to this suit; that this' case might be continued without rulings or orders, to abide the final decree in the other case, or until a ten days’ written notice was given by either party hereto, or his attorney, to the other party, or his attorney. No such written notice was ever given defendant or its attorney, nor had. the other case been finally determined before plaintiff took a default and' proved up his claim in the instant case. The default and judgment were entered July 28, 1919. This was the afternoon of a special term of court, to try equity cases. Defendant’s counsel was present in the forenoon of that day, but absent in the afternoon. He was not informed that it was proposed to take a default and prove up the case. One of plaintiff’s attorneys from Des Moines, and plaintiff, had come from Des Moines. Counsel for defendant did not know that they were in town. The default was taken perhaps by Mr. Remley, representing plaintiff locally, and proved up by plaintiff’s other counsel. On August 22, 1919, defendant filed its petition to set aside the default and judgment, and attached to the application, aiid tendered and filed, prematurely perhaps, its answer. The application, however, did contain an affidavit of merits, and its excuse for having made default. This application was not heard and determined for nearly a year after it was filed, at which time the application was sustained, the court fixing terms. Some of the matters set up as an excuse have already been referred to, and others will be referred to later herein.

Before going to that, it may be well to state, as briefly as may be, other proceedings had herein prior to the default. On February 15, 1915, defendant demurred to the petition. On May 17, 1915, the court ordered that the case should be dismissed, if it was not noted for trial at the next term of court. On June 1st thereafter, that order was set aside. The case then [1045]*1045rested for a year or more, when, on October 23, 1916, defendant’s demurrer was submitted -and sustained. On November 18tb thereafter, plaintiff filed an amended and substituted petition. On December 5, 1916, defendant moved for more specific statement, which was sustained in part on December 6th. The plaintiff did not amend his petition the next day, as required by Code Section 3555. On the contrary, plaintiff himself was in default for almostHwo and one-half years before he amended his petition, March' 21, 1919, in compliance with the ’.order of court to make it more specific.

Defendant did not take advantage of plaintiff’s default. The case rested quietly during this time, and almost without any disturbance. During that time, the cause was once continued and once dropped from the calendar at plaintiff’s cost, with leave to reinstate. Thereafter, plaintiff moved to reinstate the case, which motion was sustained. During the time stated, plaintiff filed three or four trial notices, although he was himself in default, and the case was not at issue. Defendant’s application to vacate was amended, as was th§ plaintiff’s answer thereto. Five or six witnesses were examined in open court. A number of exhibits were introduced in evidence, and two affidavits by plaintiff’s attorneys were made part of their resistance to defendant’s petition to vacate. The defendant contends that plaintiff violated the written stipulation, and that it was misled thereby,.— or rather, its counsel. Defendant also shows that it was misled by the other proceedings had, prior to the default judgment, by plaintiff’s failure to cause the issues to be made up, and by the further fact that, during all this time,,and down to a time in 1920, there was talk among the three parties, plaintiff and the two banks, to settle the matter, each of the three to lose one third of the $1,000; that defendant’s counsel was lulled into a sense of security by the conduct of plaintiff and his attorneys.

The application and the evidence are too long to refer to, except in a brief manner, which we shall attempt to do. The evidence of defendant’s counsel is that he had no actual knowledge of the filing of plaintiff’s amendment, March 21st, though he admits constructive notice by the notation on the notice book, which he says he examined from time to time. He says, however, that he had never seen this filing; that, during the two [1046]*1046and one-half years, plaintiff’s counsel Jordan lived at Des Moines; that he did not know that Mr. Remley was in the case before the default was entered; that Remley’s name did not appear on the records, appearance docket, or bar dockets; that he did not know that any new appearance had been made or amendment filed, or that any default would or could be called until after the judgment had been entered, court adjourned, and execution ordered; that several times fhe court proposed to drop the cáse from the calendar for want of prosecution, but, in deference to the nonresidence of plaintiff and his counsel, counsel for defendant asked the court to let the case rest without' dismissal or other order; that the case was dropped, a time or two, in his absence; that Mr. Remley was present in court in the forenoon of July 28th, but did not ask for default while Henderson was present; that Henderson, because of the stipulation, had, in good faith, endeavored to preserve the status of the case, awaiting a determination of the other case; that, when the application to vacate was first filed, Henderson had forgotten the written stipulation, but remembered, in a general way, that there was an understanding of that import, and later found the written stipulation, which was set up in the amendment. The same judge made the order vacating the judgment who .had originally rendered the judgment.

In defendant’s application is a showing of merits.

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Bluebook (online)
192 Iowa 1042, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brock-v-ellsworth-state-savings-bank-iowa-1922.