Action upon a promissory note. Issue was joined toy service of answer November 27, 1901. In March, 1903, 'by leave of court, an amended answer was served. The case came on for trial regularly before a jury at Towner, McHenry county, at a regular term of the district court of that county, on June 27, 1903. At the request of C. J. Murphy, an attorney at law, residing in the city of Grand Forks, who was plaintiff’s attorney of record, one A. M. Christianson, an attorney, residing in Towner, appeared and conducted the trial for plaintiff. After introducing considerable* evidence, both oral and documentary, but before the case was formally submitted, Christianson moved to dismiss without prejudice, a course which was induced by the imperfect condition of certain depositions which he deemed essential to establish the plaintiff’s case, and judgment of dismissal was duly entered. Thereafter an order was issued to defendants to show cause why the judgment should not be set aside and the case reinstated for trial. The grounds of the motion were set out in a number of affidavits made by Christianson, Murphy and others, in which it was made to appear that the plaintiff did not engage Christianson to try the case; that he was merely engaged by Murphy, and had, therefore, as plaintiff’s counsel contend, no legal authority to act for plaintiff or to move to dismiss; and that unless the judgment of dismissal is set aside, and the case reinstated, the statute of limitations will be a complete defense to another action on the note. The motion to vacate was denied, and plaintiff appeals from the order.
We are of opinion that the court did not err in making the order in question. In reaching this conclusion is it unnecessary to discuss the extent of an attorney’s authority to- employ a substitute or subordinate. Upon the fa-cts of this case the -correctness of the order does not turn upon that question. The real question is whether the plaintiff -can be heard to s-ay that Christians-on was without authority to represent him. We are agreed that he cann-ot. Christianson is a regularly licensed attorney. Presumptively an attorney -has authority to represent the person whom he assumed to- represent. Weeks on Attorneys, section 196, an-d cases -cited. Also, 4 Cyc. 928, and -cases -cited. The business of the courts is transacted upon this assumption. It is not necessary, in the first instance, for the court or counsel for the adverse party to demand proof of the authority of an attorney to act. “The burden, is upon the person denying the authority.” In this case it was upon the plaintiff. He did not disclaim Christianson’s authority, but permitted the *458case to proceed to trial without objection to his appearance. The trial judge and -defendant’s counsel assumed that he had authority to represent the plaintiff. They had a -right to rest u-p-on the presumption of authority. The plaintiff instituted the action and invoked the jurisdiction of the court. The case was regularly reached for trial. The record does not show affirmatively that the plaintiff was present at the trial. That fact, however, is not material. It was his- duty to -attend the trial in person, or by an authorized representative. A failure to appear is -deemed an election to become non-suit. Thompson on Trials, section 2229 ; Nordmanser v. Hitchcock, 40 Mo. 179. If Christianson hadj in fact, no authority to appear for him, if was his duty to disclaim his assumption of authority. He cannot be. permitted to say, after taking the hazard of a successful issue of a trial, that the attorney who assumed to- represent him had in fact no -authority. See Bingham’s Trustees v. Guthrie, 19 Pa. 418, 424; Christman v. Moran, 9 Pa. 487. He is in no worse position than he would have occupied had Christianson not assumed to represent him.
It is a-ls-o urged that the general authority of an attorney does not include the -power to discontinue the action, and that the judgment of dismissal without prejudice, which was entered on -Christianson’s motion, should therefore be set aside. This contention is based upon an erroneous view of an attorney’s general authority. True the cause of action itself is under the -control of the client. Paulson v. Lyson, 12 N. D. 354, 97 N. W. 533. But the attorney “has the free and full control of a case in its ordinary incidents. * * * He has the exclusive -conduct -and management of the suit. He cannot giv-e a release or -discharge the cause of action; but he has exclusive control of the remedy, and may continue or discontinue it.” Weeks on Attorneys, section 220. “He may discontinue an action because that -relates to the conduct of the -suit and is within his retainer, and not to- the cause o-f action.” Barrett v. Railroad Company, 45 N. Y. 628, 635; Gaillard v. Smart, 6 Cow. (N. Y.) 385; McLeran v. McNamara, 55 Cal. 508; Simpson v. Brown, 1 Wash. T. 247; Nightingale v. Company, Fed. Cas. No. 10,264. The Supreme Court of Iowa, in Rhutasel v. Rule, 65 N. W. 1013, said- that authority to dismiss must -be specially -conferred; and in Steincamp v. Gaebel (Neb.) 95 N. W. 684, the language of the Iowa court was quoted with approval. In ou-r opinion that view is unsound in principle and against the weight of authority. The question as to- whether an action shall be dismissed relates to *459the conduct of the suit and to the remedy — a question frequently arising in all courts, and is one peculiarly addressed to the skill, knowledge and judgment of the attorney. When the alternative is presented of a probable defeat upon the merits, as in this case, or a dismissal without prejudice, thus saving the cause of action, it is for the attorney to decide, as one of the incidents of the trial, and in the performance of his duty to his client, which course to pursue. In this case the attorney elected to dismiss. In so doing he did not destroy his client’s cause of action. The fact that the statute of limitations has run, if that is the fact, and may be pleaded in another action, does not affect the question. The plaintiff’s cause of action is intact. The statute of limitations relates solely to the remedy, and does not destroy the _ cause of action. Col. & U. S. Mortgage Co. v. Northwest Thresher Co., 14 N. D. 141, 103 N. W. 915, 918. Even if the dismissal was in fact ill advised and was made without a realization on Christianson’s part that the evidence he had offered and had at hand was sufficient to prove the plaintiff’s case, and in ignorance of the fact that the statute of limitations would be available as a bar in another action, as stated in the moving affidavits, still this does not furnish sufficient reason for vacating the judgment. It merely presents a mistake of judgment as to the law or ignorance of facts which he ought to have known. The following language of the Supreme court of Wisconsin, in Juneau County v. Hooker, 61 Wis. 322, 30 N. W. 351, a similar case, in denying an application to reinstate, is directly applicable and meets our full approval: “It was ignorance of either the daw or of a fact that the learned counsel of the respondent ought to have known, and might readily have known, before the discontinuance of the action. Suppose a plaintiff should voluntarily discontinue his suit because at the time he should be of the opinion that he could not maintain it, and he afterwards had formed a different opinion; would such a reason be a good one for reinstating the action, and for the court to treat the defendant ‘as being in -count and out of court at the same time,’ and for the -court ‘to- suffer the proceedings to be trifled with, even if parties w-ere -disposed to back and fill and to vacillate in the conduct of the suit,’ as the present chief justice said in his opinion in the above case in 12 W-is. ?”
In moving to dismiss without prejudice an attorney acts within his authority, and the client is -bound by his act. If the client is injured, his remedy, if any lie has, is against the attorney alone. *460Weeks on Attorneys, section 220, and cases cited at note 5. We find no abuse of discretion in the -refusal -to vacate the judgment.
(106 N. W. 129.)The order appealed- from is accordingly affirmed.
All concur.