Territory of Alaska v. Tewkesbury

326 P.2d 1011, 52 Wash. 2d 502, 1958 Wash. LEXIS 400
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedJune 19, 1958
DocketNo. 34447
StatusPublished

This text of 326 P.2d 1011 (Territory of Alaska v. Tewkesbury) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Washington Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Territory of Alaska v. Tewkesbury, 326 P.2d 1011, 52 Wash. 2d 502, 1958 Wash. LEXIS 400 (Wash. 1958).

Opinion

Weaver, J.

Plaintiff, territory of Alaska by its acting commissioner of veterans’ affairs, commenced this action in Snohomish county upon a demand promissory note payable to the order of the office of the territorial commissioner of veterans’ affairs, an agency of the territory of Alaska. The note was signed by David Tewkesbury and William Tewkes-bury.

The complaint alleges that, at the time the funds were advanced and the note executed, David and William Tewkesbury and their respective marital communities were residents of King county, Washington, and were engaged there in the publishing business as a copartnership.

David and Frances M. Tewkesbury, husband and wife, appeal from a money judgment against them.

The procedural history of this case in the trial court is divided into three phases.

First phase. The complaint was filed March 19, 1957. Personal service of the summons and complaint was made on David and Frances Tewkesbury March 21, 1957. Service was never made on William Tewkesbury and his wife.

March 29, 1957, appellants’ first counsel served, but did not file, a notice of appearance. No further pleading having been made, counsel for plaintiff served and filed a motion for default judgment on April 19, 1957. April 26, 1957, a department of the superior court denied the motion for default upon stipulation of counsel that the case be set for trial on June 3, 1957. At the same time, appellants’ first counsel filed an answer that admitted all the allegations of the complaint, except it denied that appellants “are indebted to the plaintiff in the principal sum of $4770.56, in addition to interest or any other sum.”

The answer is verified by appellants’ first counsel in the. following language, omitting formal parts:

“That he is the attorney for the Defendants, David Tewkesbury and Frances M. Tewkesbury, his wife, and is [504]*504authorized to make this verification upon their behalf; that I have read the foregoing Answer, know the contents thereof and believe the same to be true.”

May 10, 1957, plaintiff filed a motion for summary judgment. May 13th, appellants’ first counsel filed and served his notice of withdrawal as attorney of record.

Second phase. May 21, 1957, appellants’ second counsel filed a motion for an order authorizing him to file an amended answer, and he noted it for hearing on May 29, 1957. The proposed amended answer denied all of the allegations of the complaint and pleaded an affirmative defense.

May 27, 1957, the trial court entered an order which (a) denied plaintiff’s motion for summary judgment; (b) denied appellants’ motion for leave to file an amended answer, stating that “the answer of the said Defendants [appellants] as filed with the admissions contained therein shall stand”; and (c) denied appellants’ oral motion for a continuance of trial date.

Third phase. June 3, 1957, the case came on for trial before a department of the superior court, other than the one which entered the order of May 27, 1957. Appellants’ third counsel was substituted. He immediately filed a motion for leave to file an amended answer, supported by the affidavit of appellant David Tewkesbury. The affidavit states, omitting formal parts,

“. . . that the original answer of defendants, David Tewkesbury and Frances M. Tewkesbury, his wife, on file in these proceedings was verified by affiant’s original counsel [naming him] and contains admissions specifically contrary to affiant’s instructions to his said counsel; that it does not state statutory grounds for his authority, as counsel, to make verification on behalf of defendants; that it was prepared and filed tardily after expiration of the twenty-day provision allowed in the Summons in spite of the prior assurance of [counsel] that the same would be filed promptly and in time; that affiant was first apprised of the contents of said answer when, after the same had been filed, he inspected the file herein and learned of plaintiff’s motion for default; that by virtue of this situation, affiant’s counsel [naming him], at his own request, withdrew and affiant then engaged [second coun[505]*505sel] to represent him; that affiant has been denied an opportunity to properly plead and present his defense in this case; that on Friday, May 31, 1957 affiant consulted Carl B. Luckerath, attorney at law, . . . with respect to his legal rights and position as a defendant in the above-entitled suit; that he was at that time, for the first time apprised of a very material and significant defense available to the marital community of himself and wife . . . arising out of the circumstances of his domicile and permanent residence as the same bears upon the obligation constituting a basis of plaintiff’s complaint herein; . . . that unless he is afforded an opportunity to amend his answer in these proceedings he will be deprived of a full, fair and complete hearing on his defense to plaintiff’s cause of action.
“That defendants’ motion for leave to file amended answer is not made for the purpose of delaying the trial of the issues in this action.”

Although appellants’ trial counsel had filed a written motion for a continuance, he waived this motion and stated:

“I am not making this [motion to file amended answer] to delay it and we can go to trial if we can file this amended answer and have an opportunity to present our theory of the defense.”

The motion to file the amended answer was denied, and the case proceeded to trial. Appellants were bound by the admissions made in their first answer.

Appellant David Tewkesbury took the stand. An objection was sustained to a question propounded to him based upon the theory of the affirmative defense pleaded in the proposed amended answer; whereupon counsel made an offer of proof of the allegations of the proposed affirmative defense and rested the case.

As a liminal consideration, from the chronology of an action we frequently note that multiple substitutions of counsel appear to be made for the purpose of delay; but the record of the instant case does not support such a conclusion. Appellants’ answer was due April 10, 1957. Fifty-four days later — June 3, 1957 — the case was tried.

Did the trial court err (a) when it bound appellants by admissions made in an answer which was neither properly nor legally verified by appellants’ original counsel; and (b) [506]*506when it refused to permit appellants to file an amended answer in which an affirmative defense was pleaded?' •

The right of counsel to verify a pleading on behalf of • a party to .an action exists to the extent and under the conditions that the statute permits.

RCW 4.36.010 provides, in part:

“The verification must be made by the affidavit of the party ... if- such party be within the county and capable of making the affidavit; otherwise the affidavit may be made by the agent or attorney of the party. . . . When the affidavit is made by the agent or attorney it must set forth the reason of his making it.” (Italics ours.)

The verification of the answer, quoted supra,

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
326 P.2d 1011, 52 Wash. 2d 502, 1958 Wash. LEXIS 400, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/territory-of-alaska-v-tewkesbury-wash-1958.