Smith v. Noe

30 Ind. 117
CourtIndiana Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 15, 1868
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 30 Ind. 117 (Smith v. Noe) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Smith v. Noe, 30 Ind. 117 (Ind. 1868).

Opinion

Elliott, J.

On the 18th of June, 1861, Noe commenced this suit against Smith, the appellant, and Hall, on an account or claim assigned to him by Oln-ey Gould. It is alleged in the complaint that Smith and Hall were partners in large contracts 'for supplying the United States with horses for the army, and desiring the services of Gould to aid them in filling said contracts, they agreed to give him one-eighth interest in the profits that might be realized therefrom; that under said agreement, some 6,200 horses were purchased and delivered to the United States, on the contracts of Smith and Halil The profits on these amounted [118]*118to the sum of $80,000, of which sum Gould was entitled to $10,000, which Smith and Hall refused to pay; and that Gould had assigned his claim therein to Noe, the plaintiff'.

Smith was not a resident of this State. Hall was served' with process, and the cause was continued from term to term, until the November term, 1867, when it appeared by the return of the sheriff of Jackson county, in this State, to a summons directed to him, that he served the same on •Smith, by reading, on the 27th of May, 1867.

On the second day of the term last named both Smith and Hall were defaulted. On the 7th day of the term, at the instance of the plaintiff, the case was submitted to the court, on evidence, and on the 9th day of the same term the court found for the plaintiff, and assessed his damages at $12,000, and rendered a judgment therefor. The plaintiff’ then entered a remittitur for $2,000 of the judgment.

Afterwards, on the 28d day of November, 1867, and eighteenth-judicial day of the same tenn of the court, Smith filed a written motion, supported by affidavits of himself and others, praying the court to set aside said default and judgment against him, “taken through his mistake, surprise, inadvertence, and excusable neglect.”

Smith states in his affidavit, among other things, that he is, and for many years has been, a citizen of the State of Ohio, and that the summons in the case was served on him, by a person representing himself to be the sheriff’ of Jackson county, Indiana, on Sunday, whilst he was passing through this State, on the Ohio and Mississippi railroad; that about the 1st of June thereafter, he received by mail, from the same person who served the summons on him, as he supposed, a copy of said summons, which he immediately delivered to Mr. Tilden, his attorney at Cincinnati, Ohio, where he (Smith) then resided; that Mr. Tilden advised him that said copy of the summons ought to bo forwarded to Messrs. McDonald, Roache, and Sheeks, his attorneys at Indianapolis, Indiana, who had been retained by him in said cause immediately after it was commenced, and more [119]*119than a year before he was so served with process; that Mr. Tilden thereupon agreed to send it for him to McDonald, Roache, and Sheets, and that he is informed and believes that Mr. Tilden did so forward 'it by mail; that he is informed and believes that' the letter enclosing the copy of said summons was not received by McDonald, Roache, and Sheets, and that they were not aware of said service until after the default was taten. The affiant further states that when the judgment was obtained, he was at Memphis, in the State of Tennessee, and was not aware that judgment had been obtained in said cause, until Wednesday, the 20th of November, 1867, and was not aware that his presence was required in said cause until Tuesday, the 19th of said month; that relying on his counsel aforesaid to attend to said cause, he did not give the same his personal attention, but waited for and expected them to give him notice when the same might be required of him; that owing to the miscarriage of said letter to McDonald, Roache, and Sheets containing the copy of the summons, they were not informed thereof until after a default had been taten in said cause.

“ And he avers that he has a meritorious defense to- said action, in this, viz; That he was not at any time in partnership with said Gould, the plaintiff’s assignor; that at the time the plaintiff' claims that such partnership existed, this defendant and his co-defendant, Hall, were engaged in some joint transactions in the business mentioned in said complaint; and he is informed that, by some arrangement between said Gould and Hall, exclusively, said Gould was to have some interest in the share of said Hall in the profits of said business; that your petitioner and Hall were to divide the profits of said business equally, and since said transaction, he is informed that said Gould was to receive one-fourth of said Hall’s share of the profits of said business; that affiant was not aware during the progress of said business as to the exact terms of the contract between said Hall and said Gould; but after said business was closed, he [120]*120was informed that the said Gould claimed to have the interest as above stated. And affiant states that he never made, or authorized any person to make for him, any contract with said Gould, giving him, the said Gould, any interest whatever with him, said Smith, in said business, or the 'profits thereof. And affiant states that the profits of said business were not eighty thousand dollars, the amount claimed in the complaint of said Eoe, but amounted to the sum of twenty-eight thousand four hundred and eight dollars and eighty-four cents, and no more, one half of which sum was paid to C. W. Hall, and one-half retained by this petitioner; that at the time of said settlement between this affiant and said Hall, which occurred in the spring-of 1868, said Gould did not claim any interest whatever out of the share of this petitioner of the profits of said business, and never stated to this affiant until this suit was brought that he claimed any interest whatever therein. And your petitioner states that ho has in his possession, and will produce before the court, books of account of said transaction, containing the number of animals pux-chased, the prices paid, the px’ioes x-eceived, the cash contributed, and the discount account. And your petitioixer states that he desires to •appear and defend himself in said cause, which he believes he can do successfully; that he is able and willing to pay any judgment that may hereafter bo rendered in said cause; and affiant says that, by unavoidable casualty and mistake, unmixed with any fault or negligence of Ms, or the fault or negligence of his counsel, an undue advantage has been gained in said proceedings; and he says that but fox-said .mistake and unavoidable casualty, he would have appeared and defended said cause; that affiant is entii’ely unacquainted with, and ignoraixt of, court proceedings; and believing that said McDonald, Roache, and Sheeks, his counsel aforesaid, had received said copy of said summons, and that they would notify him when his presence would be required, he left the matter to their control.”

William Tilden states in his affidavitI am a member [121]*121of the bar of Hamilton county, Ohio; was admitted, to the practice in said State in April, 1854; have resided in the city of Cincinnati, and have practiced law there, since October 10th, 1858; have been the resident attorney of said defendant Smith since the fall of 1862. Some time in the summer or fall of 1866, as nearly as I can now state, in the absence of my books, the defendant Smith called upon me at my office in the said city of Cincinnati, and stated that he had incidentally learned that the complainant Noe had brought suit against him in said court. Said Smith stated that he had never been served with process in said cause, and accidentally learned of its existence.

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Bluebook (online)
30 Ind. 117, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/smith-v-noe-ind-1868.