Harkness v. Jarvis

ELLISON, J.

— Plaintiff brought this action returnable to the January, 1901, term to recover judgment on a promissory note. There was personal, service on defendants but when the case was called for trial at said January term, defendants did not appear, neither did they file an answer. Judgment was rendered for plaintiff by default. After the expiration of *278the four days’ time allowed for motions for new trial and in arrest of judgment, but at the same term, the defendants filed a motion to set aside the judgment for reasons therein alleged. The motion was not acted on by the court at that term, but went over to the following April term, without any special order of continuance. At the latter term the motion was sustained and plaintiffs have appealed.

The plaintiffs challenge the power of the circuit court to set aside the judgment on the motion aforesaid] made at a subsequent term. They agree that the court had the power to do so. at any time during the term. And that though the motion was filed more than four days after the judgment, if the court had taken it up during the term and continued it, such action ymuld have carried it over to the succeeding term with power in the court to act upon it. But they contend that not having been taken up and continued, the court’s power ended with the term. They are sustained in this view by the majority opinion of the St. Louis Court of Appeals in Head v. Randolph, 83 Mo. App. 284, Judge Biggs dissenting. We find ourselves in disagreement with that court. The Supreme Court held that a motion to set aside a judgment filed more than four days after it was rendered, but at the same term, may be continued to a succeeding term and then decided. [Childs v. Railroad, 117 Mo. 414, 425.] So, therefore, the only question for us to decide is whether a motion filed during the term but more than four days after the judgment, and not reached or acted on, is continued over to the next term of court in the absence of its being called up and continued over, or of a general order of continuance. It is undeniable that the legal right exists to file the motion during the term after the four days’ limit. It becomes a part of the proceeding in the case and the fact that it remains undisposed of at the end of the term, must show that it was intended to be carried over to the next term. If pending cases *279are not continued by special order and no general order is made, no one would suppose that such actions would abate. Tbe practice in this State has been to continue docketing such cases in .such instances, until disposed of. So a motion for new trial which is undisposed of is continued over to succeeding terms without either a special or general order. [Givens v. Van Studdiford, 86 Mo. 149, St. Francis Mill Co. v. Sugg, 142 Mo. 364.] It being clear that a cause undisposed of and a motion for new trial filed within four days and undisposed of, are each continued to the succeeding term without an order, it ought to be equally clear that no order is necessary to carry over an undisposed of motion for new trial filed without the four days. The court has no power to pass on either motion at a subsequent term except by force of the continuance, and we cannot see why a continuance would be allowed without an order in the one and denied in the other. If it be conceded that the court has the power to continue a motion filed after the four days by taking it under advisement until the next term, it must follow that the motion can be continued without being under advisement, for if it is a question of power the court cannot, of course, hold a matter under advisement beyond the period in which it has the power to act. The whole matter, it seems to us, is this: the continuance to a subsequent term carries along the power to act at that term, and such continuance is had when the motion is undisposed of, without an order either general or special. [Authorities supra.]

There need be little said on the merits of the motion. The Supreme Court has many times stated and enforced the proposition that large discretion rests with the trial court in acting on motions to set aside judgments by default. [Bank v. Armstrong, 92 Mo. 265, 280, and authorities cited.] And it has been said that it is less apt to interfere with such discretion where the judgment is set aside than when it is not. This for the *280reason that when set aside, the case is yet open and that justice will yet be done. [Helm v. Bassett, 9 Mo. 55.] And the courts of appeals have followed this view. [Longdon v. Kelly, 51 Mo. App. 572; Ensor v. Smith, 57 Mo. App. 584.] The record in this case does not disclose anything whereby we can be justified in saying that the discretion was abused.

But our decision on the first point being contrary to that of the St. Louis Court of'Appeals in Head v. Randolph aforesaid, we order the case certified to the Supreme Court as required by the Constitution.

All concur.