Kinnear Corp. v. Crawford Door Sales Co.

49 F.R.D. 3, 14 Fed. R. Serv. 2d 169, 1970 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 12955
CourtDistrict Court, D. South Carolina
DecidedFebruary 5, 1970
DocketCiv. A. No. 69-1059
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 49 F.R.D. 3 (Kinnear Corp. v. Crawford Door Sales Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kinnear Corp. v. Crawford Door Sales Co., 49 F.R.D. 3, 14 Fed. R. Serv. 2d 169, 1970 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 12955 (D.S.C. 1970).

Opinion

HEMPHILL, District Judge.

This is a motion under Rule 60(b) to set aside a judgment of default taken by plaintiff, the Kinnear Corporation, against the defendant, Crawford Door Sales Company. In seeking relief, defendant relies upon Rule 60(b).

Prior to the institution of this suit, plaintiff, which installs heavy doors in construction projects, had been a customer of the defendant, a door manufacturer. During the summer of 1969, defendant maintains, some of the doors which it ordered from plaintiff were defective; as a result defendant declined to pay the balance of its account due until adjustments could be made of defendant’s loss occasioned by the allegedly defective condition of the doors. Defendant wrote plaintiff a leter dated July 10, 1969, setting forth its position regard[5]*5ing payment of its account. The record does not reflect further communications between the parties, however, that is' immaterial. On December 10, 1969, plaintiff filed its complaint and service was effectuated on December 11, 1969. Defendant made no response until December 31, 1969, when its president wrote a letter to plaintiff detailing the defective condition of the doors supplied by plaintiff and the trouble caused by the alleged condition of those doors, and, further, itemizing the expense incurred by defendant as a result of its problems with the doors. Defendant’s president computed the amount of defendant’s accounts payable to plaintiff and deducted therefrom the total of the expenses borne by defendant as a result of the alleged defects, and enclosed a check for the remainder. On the back of the check was a typewritten provision that acceptance would constitute full payment of any debt owed by defendant to plaintiff. Additionally, in his letter, defendant’s president stated that he “considered the matter dissolved without further action.” On January 7, 1970, plaintiff took a judgment by default.

Although inappropriate, defendant’s letter of December 31, 1969, was obviously made in response to plaintiff’s summons and complaint. It set forth defendant’s position and was mailed to plaintiff’s attorney in compliance with the summons. However, legally insufficient, the December 31st letter was an “answer” to the summons and complaint.

Plaintiff concedes that a judgment and default1 can be set aside when taken due to a mistake of fact,1 but insists that when the mistake is a mistake of law, provision for relief from “excusable neglect or mistake” is inapplicable and the judgment must be sustained. As authority, plaintiff relies upon several South Carolina cases which hold that that state’s counterpart of Rule 60(b) does not apply to a mistake of law. Indeed there is considerable South Carolina authority to that effect. In Lucas v. North Carolina Mutual Life Insurance Company, 184 S.C. 119, 191 S.E. 711 (1937), upon receipt of the summons and complaint, defendant’s district manager, in good faith, mailed them back to plaintiff’s attorney informing him that the papers would have to be served through the Insurance Commissioner. In refusing to vacate the judgment and default, the court said, “However, when legal process is duly and regularly served upon a defendant and he assumes to know the law thereabout, and in so doing mistakes the law, he must, under the circumstances here, suffer the consequences of such mistaken assumption.” See also Pruitte v. Burns, 212 S.C. 325, 47 S.E.2d 785 (1948); Bissonette v. Joseph, 170 S.C. 407, 170 S.E. 467 (1933); Smalls v. Benevolent Society of the Tabernacle Church of Beaufort, 23 S.C. 602; Anderson v. Toledo Scales, 192 S.C. 300, 6 S.E.2d 465 (1939).

The rule under discussion is well established and has been followed for many years, but as this court reads the pertinent South Carolina cases, it is not applicable to the facts of the instant case. For guidance this court reviews Johnson v. Finger, 102 S.C. 354, 86 S.E. 673 (1915), where defendant’s attorney filed a motion to make more definite and certain upon receipt of the summons and complaint. Laboring under the mis[6]*6apprehension that time for answering was thereby extended, he failed to answer within the required twenty days and judgment by default was taken. Despite the error of the attorney in allowing his client to become default through a mistake as to procedure, the-court ruled that the default judgment should be vacated and defendant allowed to answer. Similarly, in Savage v. Cannon, 30 S.E.2d 70 (S.C.1944), plaintiff, a member of the bar, instituted suit against defendant for professional services. Within the twenty days defendant’s attorney served plaintiff with a demand for an itemized statement. Defendant’s attorney, erroneously believed that the demand extended the time to answer and failed to make timely answer. Plaintiff took a judgment by default and the Supreme Court held that although defendant’s attorney mistook the procedure the default judgment was properly vacated. In reaching its conclusion, the court cited with approval the following excerpt from Johnson v. Finger, supra:

While it is important that the statutes and rules of court which are designed to promote the speedy and orderly determination of causes should be complied with, it must not be forgotten that their purpose is to aid the administration of justice; and they should not be applied so as to defeat it. Of course, a party who is willfully or inexcusably in default, or one who gets himself into that predicament by resorting to technical and dilatory practice or motions without merit and for the purpose of hindering and delaying the opposite party in bringing the cause to a hearing on the merits, deserves no consideration from the court.
But in this case it was made to appear that defendant’s attorney was endeavoring in good faith, according to what he conceived to be proper practice, to subserve the interest of his client, who, according to the prima facie showing made, has a meritorious defense. The trial of the case on its merits would not have been materially delayed if he had been allowed to file his answer, and, under the circumstances, he should have been allowed to file it.

This court adopts the foregoing as an articulate and sound discussion of the principles which should govern in the determination of these matters.

The Supreme Court in Savage v. Cannon, supra, distinguished circumstances of that case and the case of Johnson v. Finger, supra, from the situation presented in Lucas v. North Carolina Mutual Life Insurance Co., supra, and Anderson v. Toledo Scales, supra. The distinguishing feature, the Court held, was that in Savage and Johnson defendants proceeded promptly, but were mistaken as to the proper procedure.2 Likewise in the instant case, defendant attempted to answer, but did so improperly. Thus the instant case falls within the exception to the general rule. Moreover, here the defendant was a layman, unschooled in the ridged technicalities of pleading. Even the neophyte lawyer knows that the rules regarding pleading are ridged and must be strictly complied with. Thus, if the Court would excuse a mistake on the part of an attorney, then it would be reasonable to assume that it would exonerate a layman for a similar mistake.

This is a motion made under Rule 60(b).

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Bluebook (online)
49 F.R.D. 3, 14 Fed. R. Serv. 2d 169, 1970 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 12955, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kinnear-corp-v-crawford-door-sales-co-scd-1970.