Stephenson v. Osage Coal & Mining Co.

Gill, J.

The appellant in this case assigns as error, first, that the trial court erred in overruling appellant’s motion for a nonsuit, which motion appears to have been filed by the appellant on December 20, 1898, and called up by the appellant, • as shown by the record, on January 11, 1901. From the record it appears that the court on the *56917th day of January, 1899, dismissed appellant’s cause of action, presumably for noncompliance with the order made in the cause at the May term, 1898, requiring the appellant to substitute the pleadings in the case by July 1, 1898. The court certainly had a right to make the order requiring the appellant to substitute the papers and pleadings by that date. The appellant neglected to comply with said order. Appellant complains that neither he nor his attorney knew of this order. It was an order on a public record, made in a case in which the appellant and his attorney were peculiarly interested, and they are certainly bound to know the proceedings in an action filed by them. It is true in this case that, appellant had filed in said cause on December 20, 1898, and before the order of dismissal, an application to reinstate the case on the docket of the court. This case was already upon the docket of the court, and while the court had by its order at the May term, 1898, stated that if the plaintiff failed to comply with its order the case should stand dismissed, no action had been taken to formally dismiss the case, and it was still upon the docket. The appellant appears nowhere, throughout the record, to have offered to the consideration of the court any papers whatever to take the place of the papers destroyed by the fire, nor does it appear anywhere in the record nor does appellant anywhere allege that he can comply, or is making any effect to comply, with the order of the court in reference to the substitution of the papers. It is further true that in his motion filed on December 20, 1898, he states that he had an agreement with the defendant’s attorney for a continuance of the case, and that the defendant should, through his attorney, furnish the plaintiff a copy of all papers, pleadings, and other records in the case. This agreement, if such agreement ever existed, was made outside of court, and does not seem to have been reduced to writing, and the court is not in any wise bound by any such agreement made out of court. It can only act upon what is be*570fore it in court. It seems also that, long before the calling up for hearing of the motion to reinstate the case, the appellant had treated his case as finally dismissed, and had begun a new suit in another jurisdiction, alleging the dismissal of this case.. Under the statute, appellant had a right to dismiss his case at any time, and he failed wholly to act upon this right. When the court came to consider the case, and found that appellant had failed to comply with its orders, it was the duty of the court to do as it did, and dismiss the case. Having dismissed the case on January 17, 1899, it was a final order disposing of the entire proceeding, and the court would be powerless to reinstate the case after the éxpiration of the term. The subsequent efforts of the appellant to obtain orders in this case must, under the statute and law, prove futile, the court being without jurisdiction to consider such orders, and the court below very properly refused to entertain such efforts on the part of the appellant. And so the second assignment of error, namely, that the trial court erred in overruling appellant’s motion to reinstate the cause upon the trial docket, and for leave to substitute the pleadings, fails, it never having been presented to the court in proper time for actión. The judgment of the lower court will be affirmed.

Clayton and Raymond, JJ., concur.