Sears v. Duling

Start, J.

The defendant, while a minor, was arrested on a writ returnable at the June term, 1903, of the Windsor County Court. An appearance by an attorney, having been seasonably entered, the cause was continued without the appointment of a guardian ad litem. At the following term the defendant appeared in person, and a guardian ad litem was appointed, and a motion to dismiss the cause was filed. The motion was overruled and the defendant excepted.

The defendant insists that he was incapable of appearing in the cause for himself; that he could not appoint an attorney to appear for him; that there was no appearance by him at the term the cause was continued, and that the continuance operated as a discontinuance.

The appearance by an attorney at the term to which the writ was returnable must be regarded as an appearance by the defendant, and it can not be said that no' appearance had been entered by him at the time the cause was continued, and the continuance did not have the effect of a discontinuance.

The case was so far within the control of the court, at the term to which it was continued, that it could then appoint a guardian ad litem and proceed with the cause upon its merits to final judgment.

*498The case of Barber v. Graves, 18th Vt. 290, is in point. In that case the suit was commenced before a justice of the peace; the infant appeared by an attorney; he was there defeated; he appealed to the county court where he appeared by an attorney and was again defeated. The judgment was reversed on writ of error, and the cause remanded to the county court where a guardian ad litem was for the. first time appointed, who' moved to dismiss the cause and the denial of the motion by the county court was, by this Court, held correct.

Judgment affirmed, and cause_ remanded..