Cochrane v. Parker

12 Colo. App. 169
CourtColorado Court of Appeals
DecidedSeptember 15, 1898
DocketNo. 1492
StatusPublished

This text of 12 Colo. App. 169 (Cochrane v. Parker) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Colorado Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cochrane v. Parker, 12 Colo. App. 169 (Colo. Ct. App. 1898).

Opinion

Wilson, J.

This was an action to recover on an account for cattle claimed to have been sold to the plaintiffs in error, who were defendants in the trial court, by Eveline Parker, since deceased. The suit has been pending for more than sixteen years. During its progress, it once made its appearance in the supreme court, a judgment in favor of the defendants being there reversed by that tribunal. Parker v. Cochrane et al., 11 Colo. 363. The material facts necessary to a proper understanding of the original dispute between the parties are there set forth, and such additional facts as have occurred in the progress of the case since that time and as are necessary to the determination of the issues now presented, will be stated in the course of tins opinion. Defendants in their brief allege at the outset that the consideration of only four assignments of error is necessary, because all other controverted questions are involved in the four. We will consider them in the order in which they are presented and discussed.

1. It appears that the original plaintiff, Mrs. Parker, died during .the pendency of the suit in the supreme court, and it is claimed, prior to the final judgment of reversal by that court. Upon being remanded, various proceedings were had in regard to the substitution of party plaintiff, filing of additional pleadings, etc., which we will hereafter notice, but the issues were finally made-up, and the case became ready for trial in [171]*171March, 1896, about eight years after the judgment in the supreme court. At the April term of the court, 1896, the case was continued at the costs of defendants. On the first day of the next term of the court, November 9, 1896, the court upon its own motion set the cause for trial on November 17. On this last mentioned day, the defendants appeared and filed a motion to set aside the order setting the case for trial on that day, and also a motion for a continuance of the cause. On the same day, both motions came on to be heard, defendants being represented by their counsel, and both were sustained, and thereupon the court of its own motion continued said cause to November 27, 1896, and set that day at 8 o’ciock in the afternoon for the beginning of the trial. After-wards, on November 27, defendants again appeared by their counsel, and presented a motion supported by affidavit, to vacate the order setting the cause for trial on that day, and also a motion for a continuance. The ground alleged in support of the first named motion was that the order of the court on November 17, setting the cause for trial on the 27th, had been made without any notice thereof having been given to these defendants, and that the trial on said day would be to the great injury of defendants. The facts upon which it was claimed that a trial at that time would he to the injury of defendants are substantially those set forth in the affidavits for a continuance, and will be noticed hereafter. We fail to see wherein defendants could have been prejudiced by want of notice, when the order was made on November 17, because their counsel were present. If notice were required at all for the setting of a case for trial, its sole object and purpose was attained by the presence of defendants’ counsel. If, however, counsel intend to maintain that the court had no right to make an order of its own motion, it not appearing- from the record that any application therefor was made by the other party, we think that their position cannot be sustained. The fixing of a time for the trial of a cause is not an act required or prescribed by either code or statute, and it is clearly within the inherent powers of the court of its own motion to take [172]*172such steps, and make such orders as may be necessary to the dispatch of its business, and the disposition of causes pending on its docket. Trinidad v. Simpson, 5 Colo. 65. Of course it is within the province of a court to require by rule that if there should be an application for the setting of a cause for trial, that notice of this application should be given, but no such rule is shown here. In many counties of the state, where terms are infrequent and where there is not more than enough business to occupy the court for a few days, such a rule even would be inexpedient and inapplicable. Moreover, the case having been set for trial on the 17th, and the application for a continuance being only for a time and not for the term, the order of the court allowing the continuance to November 27, was in itself without any further order the fixing of the time for its trial. The affidavits do not show any abuse oE discretion by the court, nor that any injury was caused to or suffered by the defendants by reason of such order. The case of Lux v. McLeod, 19 Colo. 465, does not go to the extent claimed by defendants, and is not applicable to this case. In that, the court did not say that the setting of a cause fox-trial by the court oxx its owxx motioix without xxotice to defendant was erroneous. It said, conceding this to be the case, the appellant had failed to show wherein he was prejudiced by such actioxx. In this case, the defendants had notice, because they were present by their counsel when the ox-der was made, aixd they have xxot shown that they were prejudiced by such order.

2. The second assignment of error is predicated upon the refusal of the court to continue the cause upon the application of defendants on November 17. Applications for continuances are largely addressed to the discretion of the court, and ordinarily there must appear to have beexx some abuse of discretion before an appellate court will oxx this ground alone reverse a cause. The application here w-as based upon the absexxce of oixe of the parties defendant. It is the duty of a party to a suit to take notice of the term when his cause may come up for trial, axxd to attend if he so desires. We do xxot [173]*173mean to say, of course, that in no case should a cause be continued, because of the absence of a party, but in such case it should first clearly appear that the party is necessarily and unavoidably absent, and also if it is urged that he is a witness in the cause, such further facts should certainly be set forth as are required in an application for continuance on the ground of the absence of a witness who is not a party. Under the circumstances of this case, we do not think that sufficient excuse was given for the absence of the party. The court had already granted one continuance, from the 9th to the 17th, on an application setting forth the same facts, and it seems that this should have been sufficient when the only excuse for absence was private business. But however this may have been, the affidavits in support of the application were wholly insufficient in other material respects. It was not shown that there were not other witnesses by whom the same evidence could have been produced as was expected from the absent defendant.

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Bluebook (online)
12 Colo. App. 169, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cochrane-v-parker-coloctapp-1898.