Workman v. District Court

269 N.W. 27, 222 Iowa 364
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedSeptember 29, 1936
DocketNo. 43318.
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 269 N.W. 27 (Workman v. District Court) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Workman v. District Court, 269 N.W. 27, 222 Iowa 364 (iowa 1936).

Opinion

Albert, J.

The question raised under this writ is whether or not the district court of Delaware county had the jurisdiction to make the order hereinafter referred to vacating the judgment and reinstating the case.

The original action involved herein was entitled Iletha Sehlumbohm v. the petitioners in this action, and was bottomed on an alleged injury to the plaintiff growing out of an automobile accident. To a full understanding* of the question involved herein the following chronology is necessary.

On the 16th day of November, 1932, a petition was filed in the Delaware county district court as above entitled, seeking recovery for personal injuries, and the original notice, about the same time, was placed in the hands of the sheriff. Service was made of said original notice on the defendants in that action on the 17th of August, 1933. On the 10th of December, 1934, the court made an order dismissing said petition and ordering judgment against the plaintiff for costs. On the 7th of August, 1935, an application was made in said matter asking that the aforesaid judgment and order of December 10, 1934, be rescinded, annulled, and set aside, and that the court make an order reinstating said cause without prejudice to the right of any parties. On the same day one of the judges of said court ordered that said application come on for hearing before the court, at the courthouse at Manchester, Delaware county, Iowa, at ten o ’clock, A. M., on the 15th day of August, 1935, and further ordered that notice of said hearing be served on the defendants by mailing a copy of said notice to the last known address of each of said defendants, and mailing a copy thereof to the defendants’ attorney of record. Attached to said order was a notice of the filing of this application “praying that a certain order entered on the 10th of December 1934 be set aside and held for naught and the cause be reinstated”, and advising the defendants in *366 said action that unless they appeared thereto and objected an order setting aside said dismissal and reinstating said cause as prayed in the petition would be entered. The sheriff of said county made return that in pursuance of said order he mailed a copy of said notice to certain named parties, among others the petitioners herein, Workman and Jarvis, and deposited same in .the U. S. post office at Manchester, first-class postage paid, on the 8th of August, 1935.

On the 21st day of September, 1935, an order was entered in the district court of Delaware county in the aforesaid case of Schlumbohm v. Workman and Jarvis, reciting among other things that “the above-entitled matter came on for hearing on the application of the plaintiff for reinstatement of the cause; that the plaintiff appeared by her attorneys Cooney & Tracey, there being no appearance for the defendants in the matter and no objections filed by said defendants. The court having examined the petition for reinstatement, and having examined the notice of this hearing and return of service thereon, and it appearing that due notice of the time and place of hearing was given and of the order heretofore made, and being’ fully advised in the premises, finds that the plaintiff has in good faith attempted to make progress and try the above-entitled action, and that the delay in such trial has been due to no fault of the plaintiff, and the plaintiff has shown good cause for delay in prosecuting the same and filed proper affidavits in support of such showing. It is therefore adjudged and decreed that the order entered herein in the above-entitled cause on the 10th of December 1934, dismissing said action and taxing the costs to the plaintiff, be and the same is hereby rescinded, annulled, and set aside, and the said cause of action be and the same is hereby reinstated."

It is to review the action of the court in thus setting aside the order and judgment of December 10, 1934, and reinstating this cause, that this writ of certiorari was issued.

The original order of December 10, 1934, dismissed said cause under rule 3 of the court rules then in existence in said district court. The third rule provides as follows:

“On the first day of each term of court in each county in this judicial district the clerk of the court shall present to the court a list of all law and equity cases wherein the petition has *367 been on file more than two years, and all such eases shall be dismissed by the court at the cost of the plaintiff, or plaintiffs, for want of prosecution unless otherwise ordered by the court upon good cause being shown by affidavit for delay in the prosecution of the same.”

It was under and by virtue of this rule that the proceedings were dismissed on the 10th of December, 1934.

We have in numerous cases approved the dismissal of causes under rules similar to this.

The last time we had this question before us was in Hanson v. McCoy, 221 Iowa 523, 266 N. W. 1. The petitioners insist, however, that the court has no power to make a rule which is arbitrary or unreasonable in its operation. With this contention we agree. But we' can see nothing in the rule itself that is in any way arbitrary or unreasonable. Some rules are necessary to expedite business in the district courts and we consider the rule in itself not subject to the complaint lodged against it. The requirements of the rule seem to have been literally complied with, and the court made an order by virtue of the rule dismissing the cause and judgment against the plaintiff for costs.

The power of the court to modify or set aside a judgment, when once entered, is purely statutory. Chapter 552 of the Code provides the procedure to vacate or modify a judgment. The petitioners assert that the conditions in this case did not warrant them in proceeding under said chapter, and that they in fact did not make their application under it, but based it, and relied wholly, on section 10801 of the code, reading as follows:

‘ ‘ The record aforesaid is under the control of the court, and may be amended, or any entry therein expunged, at any time during the term at which it is made, or before it is signed by the judge.”

The respondents argue that under the return to this writ of certiorari there is nothing to show that the December 1934 term was ended at the time this application was made. With this we do not agree. As we read this record, the December term 1934 of said court was adjourned sine die on the 9th'of March 1935, and the next succeeding term of said court was begun in March, and that term was adjourned sine die on the 13th of May. The application herein was made on the following 7th of August. *368 Hence it is apparent that after the term closed at which the original order of dismissal was made, at least one term of court intervened, which was adjourned sine die before this application was made. Under the former part of said section 10801 this application having not been made during the term at which the order was entered, the court acquired no jurisdiction; but the petitioners, conceding this, say that they are benefited by the subsequent clause in said section because they did make their application before the judge had signed the court record where said order of dismissal was entered.

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Bluebook (online)
269 N.W. 27, 222 Iowa 364, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/workman-v-district-court-iowa-1936.