Toon v. Pickwick Stages, Northern Division, Inc.

226 P. 628, 66 Cal. App. 450, 1924 Cal. App. LEXIS 509
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedApril 7, 1924
DocketCiv. No. 4204.
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 226 P. 628 (Toon v. Pickwick Stages, Northern Division, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Toon v. Pickwick Stages, Northern Division, Inc., 226 P. 628, 66 Cal. App. 450, 1924 Cal. App. LEXIS 509 (Cal. Ct. App. 1924).

Opinion

FINLAYSON, P. J.

This is an appeal from an order denying defendant’s motion to vacate a default judgment.

The action is one having for its purpose the recovery of damages for injuries suffered by plaintiff in an automobile accident alleged to have been caused by defendant’s negligence. Defendant, a California corporation having its principal place of business in the city of Los Angeles, is a common carrier of passengers by automobile stage. The complaint, which was filed in the superior court for Santa Barbara County on October 21, 1921, alleges that on March 14th of that year, in the city of Santa Barbara, the driver of one of defendant’s autostages so negligently operated his vehicle that it ran into the automobile which plaintiff was driving, thereby injuring the latter.

On October 26, 1921, in the city of Los Angeles, the summons and a copy of the complaint were served upon defendant’s secretary. On November 29, 1921, no appearance having been made by defendant within the time allowed by law therefor, plaintiff caused defendant’s default to be entered, and on December 30, 1921, after an ex pwrte hearing of evidence presented by plaintiff, the lower court entered a judgment in plaintiff’s favor. Defendant moved expeditiously to set aside the default and the judgment entered thereon by serving and filing on January 7, 1922, its notice of motion under section 473 of the Code of Civil Procedure. The showing made by defendant in support of its motion was not contradicted 'by any evidence on the part of plaintiff. The only question, therefore, is whether the facts set forth in the affidavits filed on behalf of defendant are sufficient to show that it would be an abuse of discretion to deny the motion to open the default.

The affidavits disclose the following: At the time of the accident defendant was insured against loss by the Califor *452 nia Highway Indemnity Exchange, a mutual interinsuranee association having an office in the city of Los Angeles and hereafter referred to as the insurance carrier. The policy of insurance requires the insurance carrier to assume charge and control of all suits and of all litigation arising out of accidents wherein the insured is involved. The insurance carrier employs a “claims attorney,” who in this instance acted as counsel for defendant, and to whom, therefore, we shall refer indiscriminately as defendant’s attorney and the insurance carrier’s claims attorney.

Upon being served with the summons and complaint on October 26, 1921, defendant’s secretary caused the documents to be placed in an envelope and mailed to the insurance carrier, whose office, as we have stated, is in the city of Los Angeles. That the papers were received by the insurance carrier in due course is evident from the fact that later when search was made they were found among the files in the office of its claims attorney. No letter of instructions was inclosed with the summons and complaint, and no instructions were given to the officers or agents of the insurance carrier. None of defendant’s officers or employees had any knowledge that defendant’s default had been entered until notified thereof by defendant’s attorney.

Prior to the commencement of this action, and covering a period of some weeks, a correspondence was carried on between attorneys of the Automobile Club of Southern California and defendant’s attorney, the purpose of which was to effect a compromise settlement of plaintiff’s claim for damages. No satisfactory settlement having been arrived at, plaintiff took his claim out of the hands of the automobile club’s attorneys and thereafter caused this action to be commenced by his present counsel.

Not until December 20, 1921, did defendant’s attorney have any - notice or knowledge that this action had been commenced. On that day, happening to be in the courtroom of the superior court for Santa Barbara County for the purpose of representing this defendant in the trial of another action, he overheard a chance remark which led him to examine the files in the office of the clerk of that court. This examination led to the discovery that summons and complaint had been served upon defendant’s secretary and that defendant’s default had been entered.

*453 Returning to Los Angeles, defendant’s attorney, who, it will be recalled, is the insurance carrier’s claims attorney, made an examination of the files in his office. His office, it would seem, is one of a suite of offices rented by his principal, the insurance carrier. The examination disclosed that the summons and complaint had been received in the office. Both documents, together with the envelope in which they had been placed, were “inadvertently filed away by the employees” of the claims attorney in the latter’s office “without calling the matter to [the attorney’s] attention.” During ■ a period of several months, including the time when the claims attorney was carrying on the correspondence with the attorneys of the automobile club relative to plaintiff’s claim and up to the time when the summons and complaint were served, the claims attorney “had several changes in the personnel of his office force, including several new stenographers, whose duty involved the handling and -filing of all papers in connection with claims made upon said California Highway Indemnity Exchange;” In the affidavit which was made by defendant’s attorney and presented to the lower court on the motion to set aside the default it is stated: “Through inadvertence and mistake, which ordinary care and diligence on the part of affiant could not have guarded against or overcome, the summons and complaint in this action became filed away in the files in the office of affiant, and were not called directly to his attention for consideration and action thereon.”

None of defendant’s officers has any personal knowledge of the facts involved in the accident. An investigation of the facts relating to the accident was made by defendant’s attorney, who prosecuted inquiries and conducted an examination of the scene of the collision and, according to his affidavit, “has personal knowledge of the locality, facts and circumstances under which the accident is alleged to have occurred.” For this reason he made the affidavit of merits and sets forth therein facts which, if true, show that defendant has a good and meritorious defense to the action.

The legal principles by which courts are guided in considering motions to set aside defaults are well established and are comparatively simple. The trial court is to exercise a sound and legal discretion in passing upon the application. This discretion is not capricious or arbitrary, *454 but it is an impartial discretion and is to be exercised in such a manner as to conform with the sprit of the law by subserving and not impeding or defeating the ends of substantial justice. (Waite v. Southern Pac. Co., 192 Cal. 467 [221 Pac. 204].) “Section 473,” says the court in Nicoll v. Weldon, 130 Cal. 667 [63 Pac. 64], “is a remedial provision, and is to be liberally construed so as to dispose of cases upon their substantial merits and to give to the party claiming in good faith to have a substantial defense to the action an opportunity to present it. . . .

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Bluebook (online)
226 P. 628, 66 Cal. App. 450, 1924 Cal. App. LEXIS 509, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/toon-v-pickwick-stages-northern-division-inc-calctapp-1924.