James v. Signell

Ingraham, J.:

This action was commenced by the service of the summons and complaint upon the 22d of January, 1901, and the defendant’s time to' appear and answer expired on February 11, 1901. On that day an order was obtained from a justice of the Supreme Court extending the time to answer or demur twenty days from February 11, 1901, ánd a copy of the order was served upon the plaintiff’s attorney ; but the affidavits upon which the order was granted were not served with the order. The plaintiff’s attorney, however, retained the order, not returning it to the defendant’s attorney, nor giving any notice of the irregularity, but on the nineteenth of February served a notice of motion, returnable on February twenty-eighth, for judgment. On February twenty-sixth the defendant’s attorney, having discovered that the affidavits upon which the order extending the time to answer had been granted had not been served, caused a copy of such affidavits to be served upon the plaintiff’s attorney, but on the afternoon of that day the plaintiff’s attorney returned, such affidavits with a notice that they had been- served too late, that, the defendant’s time to plead had expired, and that an application for judgment-upon the defendant’s default had been made. Whereupon the defendant obtained an order to show cause, asking that his default, if any, be opened and that he be allowed to serve such order and to defend the action. That motion was granted upon the defendant paying the accrued costs of the action and ten dollars costs of the motion, and from that order the plaintiff appeals.

I do not think that the defendant was in default. An order having been obtained extending his time to answer, upon service of the- order, the defendant would not be in default until the timo within which, under the order, he was authorized to serve the answer *297had expired. A failure to serve the affidavits upon which that order was granted was a mere irregularity which was waived by not returning the order. The order appealed from, however, treated the defendant as being in default and opened that default and allowed the defendant to answer; but as the defendant has not appealed from that order the only question presented is whether the court was justified in allowing the defendant to answer upon the terms imposed. If the defendant was not in default it is quite clear that the court was not justified in imposing any terms, and an appeal by the plaintiff, upon the ground that the terms imposed were insufficient, must fall.

The order appealed from should, therefore, be affirmed, with ten dollars costs and disbursements.

Van Brunt, P. J., Rumsey, O’Brien and Hatch, JJ., concurred.

Order affirmed, with ten dollars costs and disbursements.