Root v. Sweeney

Haney, P. J.

This action was commenced in 1892 by- and in the name of a California corporation. In 1897 the present plaintiffs were substituted for the corporation, and allowed to serve an amended and supplemental complaint, to which defendant demurred on the ground that the plaintiffs had not legal capacity to sue. The demurrer was sustained. On appeal this court reversed the order of the circuit court, and remanded the action for further proceedings according to law and its decision, wherein the nature of the action is fully disclosed. Root v. Sweeney, 12 S. D. 43, 80 N. W. 149. The remittitur was filed below on December 18, 1899. No proceedings were had until February 21, 1901, when the defendant moved to dismiss the action for failure to prosecute, which motion was granted, and the plaintiffs appealed.

It is conceded that nothing was done in the circuit court after the reversal, except the filing of the remittitur, until defendant’s motion to dismiss was made, more than one year from the date of the decision by this court, and more than one year from the filing of the remittitur in the office of the clerk of the circuit court. It is also conceded that the order appealed from rested in the sound discretion of the lower court, and should not be reversed unless it appears that there was abuse of such discretion. The statute reads thus: “In every case in error, or on appeal, in which the Supreme Court shall order a new trial or further proceedings in the court below, the record shall be transmitted to such court, and proceedings had therein within one year from the date of such order in the Supreme Court, or in default thereof, the action shall be dismissed, unless upon, good cause shown, the court shall otherwise order.” Comp. Laws, § 5239.

*183It requires no argument to demonstrate that themerefiling of the remittitur and recor by the clerk does not constitute “further proceedings’’ within the meaning of the statute. The arrival and deposit of the papers in the office of the clerk of the circuit court certainly cannot be construed as a step taken by the court in determining the rights of the parties and issues involved. Further proceedings having been ordered, and none had within the year, the action should have been dismissed, unless good cause was shown for ordering otherwise.

The litigation was initiated by the plaintiffs for the purpose of obtaining a personal judgment. Defendant was not interested in having it properly prosecuted. The plaintiffs alone were injured by the dismissal. They were bound to proceed within the year, unless prevented by some cause for which they were not responsible. Has any such cause been shown? We think not. No fraud, accident, or mistake has been alleged. The contention that the action should not have been dismissed because the defendant was in default by having failed to answer the amended complaint after the cause was remanded is clearly untenable. If he was in default the plaintiff’s delay was all the more inexcusable, because the prosecution of the action was thereby rendered less difficult.

Nor is the contention tenable that the plaintiffs were excused from proceeding for the reason that a motion, noticed by the defendant on the same day, but before the- former appeal was perfected, to vacate the order allowing the substitution of parties plaintiff and serving of the amended complaint, had not been brought on for hearing or heard by. the court. It is difficult to comprehend how any serious consideration could be given such a motion made after the defendant had demurred to *184the amended complaint, but, however this may be, assuming such motion to have been pending, would that have excused the plaintiffs? Certainly not. It would not in any manner bav«"prevented"them from proceeding to obtain the judgment they sought.

Street talk between the attorneys of the respective parties, relative to a settlement, which resulted in no agreement, oral or otherwise, did nqt justify the delay. An attorney may bind his client to any agreement in respect to any proceeding within the scope of his proper duties and powers; but no evidence of any such agreement is receivable, except the statement of, the attorney himself, his written agreement signed and filed with the clerk, or an entry thereof upon the records of the court. Comp. Laws, § 467. In the case at bar there was no competent evidence of an agreement; indeed, no sufficient evidence of even an oral agreement; and therefore nothing looking towards a settlement (assuming that the attorneys of the defendant were authorized to settle) upon which the plaintiffs or anyone else had a right to rely.

The fact that an equitable action was pending in the United States court, wherein it was sought to charge the defendant as a trustee of the plaintiffs and subject certain judgments to the payment of the debt involved in this action, affords no reason for a failure to prosecute this action. We do not understand that the pendency of that suit would have interfered with the progress of this, but, if it would have, the plaintiffs were responsible for such interference, having themselves instituted the equitable action after this one was commenced.

The fact that defendant was insolvent, if such was the fact may have rendered the procurement of a personal judgment *185against him less desirable, but it could not have in any manner retarded the plaintiffs in proceeding to procure such a judgment. We think the plaintiffs have shown no cause for their failure to prosecute for which they were not themselves responsible, and that the learned circuit court was entirely justified in dismissing the action. In any event, there was no reversible abuse of discretion.

The order appealed from is affirmed.