Slater v. Selover

This is an appeal from an order of court granting defendant's motion to set aside his default and vacate the judgment entered thereon.

Defendant was duly served with summons and neglected to plead within the time prescribed therefor. Whereupon his default for such failure was entered by the clerk, followed by the entry of judgment on February 27, 1914. On March 23d following, pursuant to notice thereof duly given, defendant, upon the grounds that he had a good and meritorious defense and that his failure to plead was due to mistake, inadvertence, and excusable neglect, moved the court to vacate the judgment and set aside the default and permit him to answer. This motion was supported by defendant's affidavit to the effect that, when served with summons, he expected to be engaged in business out of town, by reason of which fact he gave the papers to one Whipple, his business partner, and instructed him to attend to the matter and have the action defended; and supposing Whipple had followed his instructions he dismissed the subject from his mind and did not discover such omission to answer until after default was entered. Whipple's affidavit filed in support of the motion corroborates that of Selover, in addition to which he merely avers *Page 527 that, upon the papers being delivered to him by Selover, he placed them in a pigeonhole, "and through mistake, inadvertence and excusable neglect did not have an answer put in said case, and forgot all about said action until March 12th."

We think the averments of the affidavit wholly insufficient to sustain the ruling of the court. At the very most, disregarding the conclusion, since no other facts are stated from which the court could find that defendant's omission was due to mistake, inadvertence, and excusable neglect, it appears the defendant intrusted and delivered the papers to Whipple, instructing him to have the action defended, and Whipple, as he says, "forgot all about said action." It would be difficult to conceive of a case possessing less merit.

However this may be, the order is erroneous for the reason that no sufficient affidavit of merits was presented, without which the order could not be made. (Nevada Bank v. Dresbach,63 Cal. 324; Quan Quock Fong v. Lyons, 20 Cal. App. 668, [130 P. 33].) The only statement as to merits is contained in the affidavit of defendant, wherein he avers "that affiant has a good and meritorious defense to said action, and wishes to defend same, and that affiant has stated his defense to his attorney who informs him that he has a good defense to said action." Such statement has been repeatedly held to be insufficient as an affidavit of merits. (Nickerson v.California Raisin Co., 61 Cal. 268; People v.Larue, 66 Cal. 235, [5 P. 157]; Cooper-Power v. Hanlon,7 Cal. App. 724, [95 P. 678]; Phillips v. Logan, 18 Cal. App. 287, [122 P. 1096].) Not only does the affidavit limit the facts stated by defendant to his attorney to those constituting his defense, but such defense as stated may have been purely technical and without any merit whatsoever. Such affidavit should have shown that defendant stated all the facts of the case to his attorney, and not merely those constituting his defense.

The order is reversed.

Conrey, P. J., and James, J., concurred.

*Page 528