The sole question in the case is the correctness of the court’s ruling on the motion to set aside the default and judgment." The action was to recover damages for personal injuries received by plaintiff' while acting as a lineman for the defendant company, due to the fact that he came in contact with an iron brace on one of the defendant’s poles, which had become charged with electricity, and received a violent shock, which precipitated him to the ground, a distance of some thirty feet, and caused the injuries of which he complains. It is charged in the petition, and, we must assume, was established to' the satisfaction of the court, that defendant was negl gent either in the construction or maintenance of the pole, and that plaintiff did not contribute to the injury by any negligence on his part.
’The exact claim is that defendant maintained a very tall pole on one of the streets in Sioux City, on which were strung many wires , attached to crossbars affixed thereto; the lower one of which was some thirty feet from the ground. These crossbars were braced with iron braces extending diagonally from the pole to the crossbars. Many months prior to the accident in question the Sioux City Electric Company, operating.a light plant in said city, made an upright addition to the pole described, and strung thereon its wires. From the top of the pole, as thus extended, wires ran down to whatisknown as a “converter,’* or small iron box, and from the converter extended down until they touched one of the iron braces above described. The wires were run from the top of the pole down to the converter and beyond for the purpose of supplying an adjacent storekeeper with light for his building. The defendant telephone company knew of this situation, and notified the electric company to remove its wires, but that company failed and neglected to do so.
Plaintiff was required to make some . changes in the telephone wires, and, having performed his duties, started *181to descend. While in the act of descending, he caught hold of one of the diagonal iron braces, and received the shock of which he complains. It seems that the brace became charged with electricity by reason of .the insulation •of the electric light wire having become worn by constant contact with and rubbing against the iron brace. Action was brought against both the telephone company and the electric light company. Notice of the action was served on one Clark, the local agent'of the Iowa Telephone Company at Sioux City, who immediately sent the same to E. B. Smith, general manager of the company, at Davenport, Iowa. Thereafter, except as we shall hereafter state, Clark had nothing to do with the matter. Smith received tjie notice in due course, and took the same to Mr. E. E. Cook, the general counsel of the company, at Davenport, with whom he left the notice, together with some other papers relating to the case.
After talking the matter over, and concluding that •defense f-hould be made, it was agreed that A. A. and A. J. Van Wagenen, attorneys at law in Sioux City, Iowa, should be employed to defend this action. Smith’s understanding from the conversation was that Cook should notify the Sioux City attorneys of the company’s desire to employ them, while Cook understood that Smith should attend to the matter. As a result of this misunderstanding, no attorneys were in fact employed to conduct the defense, and the case went to judgment as before stated. There was no thought that Cook should personally appear in the case, but it was agreed, as before staked, that local attorneys at Sioux City should look after it. Neither Cook nor Smith knew of this misunderstanding until after the judgment has been rendered against the company. The motion to set aside the default was accompanied by an affidavit of merits, and also by a duly verified answer on behalf of the telephone company, to which we shall presently make some reference.
*182On behalf of plaintiff' it is shown that Clark had a conversation with one of plaintiff’s attorneys before the action was brought, in which the attorney asked Clark to write the company regarding the case; and that, after the notice was served, Clark had a letter from the general manager about the matter, but nothing was said in that with reference to the employment of attorneys. Clark had a conversation with plaintiff before the action was commenced, in which he said that the company was not liable, and that they did not intend to pay any attention to the suit. An attorney for the electric light company also called upon Clark, and tried to interest him in the suit. But Clark said they did not wish to be brought into the case, but that he would write to the company. The company refused to take any part in the matter, and insisted that it was not liable. After the default judgment was obtained, a reporter called up Clark by telephone and informed him of the situation, and Clark responded that the company paid no attention to the matter, and he did not care to recognize it by discussing the case. He said the company had ignored it all the way through. Clark also stated that he presumed that the company knew what it was doing, and that it was probably acting under legal advice. It is manifest that Clark was unfamiliar with the situation and with legal proceedings in general, and his statements must be viewed from that standpoint. One of the agents at the home office wrote Clark, before the case was commenced, that the company would not appear in the matter of claim for damages to plaintiff. This was manifestly intended as a response to the letter written by Clark at the solicitation of the attorney for the electric light company, and referred to a settlement out of court. Smith also wrote Clark not to have any conference with this attorney, preferring to have the matter come to trial in the event the electric company did not settle.
*183This is practically the entire showing made in ■ the case. With reference to Clark’s connection with it after he sent the original notice to the head office in Davenport, it is doubtful if he could make any statements or admissions which would bind the company. He had nothing to do with the litigation, save to receive and forward the notice. After that was done, his connection with the case ceased, and his agency was not broad enough to enable him to bind the company by his admissions. ■ But, should these admissions be considered, it is manifest that they do not show an intent on the part of the company to abandon all defense, and to allow a judgment to be taken against it. Throughout the entire transaction this defendant was denying liability, and all talk about ignoring the case had reference to the claim, and not to any case in court. It did not care to take any part even in an attempt at settlement, for fear this might be construed as a recognition of liability. Everything shown in evidence points so strongly in this direction that a finding to the contrary would be in the teeth of the evidence.
The only question, then, is whether or not the misunderstanding between Smith and Oook, occurring in the manner, it did, sufficiently excused the default, and entitled the telephone company to a setting aside of the judgment. Plaintiff insists that the failure of the telephone company to appear was due to negligence and carelessness on its part, and that it should not now be heard to complain; while the telephone company claims that it has excused the default by showing mistake, misunderstanding, and unavoidable casualty or misfortune. Defaults occurring through negligence or carelessness on the part of the judgment defendant or his attorney will not, of course, be set aside, for the law rewards the diligent, and not the careless. Moreover, one who, through carelessness or inattention to duty, brings misfortune upon himself, will not, as a rule, be heard to complain. But it has ever been the *184purpose of the courts to relieve from accident, mistake, and misfortune not brought about through neglect or inactivity. There is no difficulty in announcing the general rules which should govern in such applications as this, but trouble arises when attempt is made to apply these rules to the facts of the particular case. Hence it has been said that each case must be determined to a great extent upon its own circumstances. Courts should and do favor the trial of causes upon their merits, and, if failure to secure such trial is not due to the supinity or inattention of the party in default, he should, upon a proper show ing of merits, be given an opportunity to be heard.
On the record before us we must hold that the failure of the telephone company to appear was due to an honest misunderstanding between the general manager,. Smith, and the general counsel, Cook, as to who should employ the local attorneys at Sioux City. If this was due to negligence or want of ordinary care and attention, then, of course, the ruling of the trial court was correct, and should be sustained. But if, on the other hand, it was the result of mistake or misfortune, due to the limitations of the human mind, the infirmities of language, or other fortuitous circumstances, not contributed to by negligence or inattention to duty, then the default should have been set aside. We do not have before us the exact conversation between Smith and Cook, but the statement of each under oath is that they talked over the case, concluded there was a good defense, agreed upon the attorneys who were to appear for the company, and that, through misunderstanding as to which of the two men should notify the firm of attorneys at Sioux City to look after the case, no appearance was entered. We feel sure that the company intended to make defense. Indeed, that could hardly be disputed in the face of the record now before us, and plaintiff is not bold enough to claim in argument tbat the telephone company was seeking to secure some advantage by the *185course of procedure adopted in this case. Of course, mere forgetfulness of the party or his-attorney will not excuse him. But misunderstanding or mistake undoubtedly will. Matters growing out of misunderstanding and mistake are before us almost every day. Indeed, we think there is less of perjury than is commonly supposed. Misunderstanding and mistake are common, and conflict in human testimony is more often due to this than to willful perversion of truth. The cases generally hold that mutual mistake or misunderstanding is good ground for setting aside a default. Buena Vista Co. v. I. F. & S. C. R. Co., 49 Iowa, 658; Ordway v. Suchard, 31 Iowa, 481; Sitzer v. Fenzloff, 112 Iowa, 493; Bank v. Swan, 100 Iowa, 718; Panesi v. Boswell, 12 Heisk. 323; McKinley v. Tuttle, 34 Cal. 235; Beatty v. O’Connor, 106 Ind. 87 (5 N. E. Rep. 880); Morse v. Callantine, 19 Mont. 87 (47 Pac. Rep. 635.) In the Buena Vista Case it is said: “One of the attorneys testified positively that he did not understand his retainer extended further than appearance at the first term, and that he did not regard himself as engaged in the case. It is true that the other attorneys had a different understanding, of the retainer. The law exacts of attorneys a diligence in their business, and will not relieve against negligence on their part. But it regards attorneys as mere men, who, with the best of intentions, may be mistaken in the most important affairs. They are not required to be diligent beyond the capacities of human nature. If any diligent, honest attorney misunderstands the extent of his employment, he ought not to be regarded as negligent when acting in good faith as to his duty.”
Plaintiff relies on Church v. Lacey, 102 Iowa, 235; Byrnes v. Insurance Co., 114 Iowa, 738; Williams v. Westcott, 77 Iowa, 332; Vinegar Co. v. Boddy, 108 Iowa, 538, and other like cases. Before referring to these, it is well to state that, to justify interference by this court with a ruling on a motion of this kind, a much stronger showing *186of abuse of discretion in the trial court must be made when the default has been set aside than where it has been, denied. Courts almost universally favor a trial on the merits, and, when there has been a reasonable excuse shown for the default, there should be no objection to such a trial to those who are reasonably diligent. Westphal v. Clark, 46 Iowa, 263. Returning now to the cases relied upon by the plaintiff. In the Williams Case the attorney relied upon information, or rather lack of information, from the clerk of the courts, and was not misled by any mistake of fact. It was a clear case of negligence of the-attorney, hot superinduced by mistake or misunderstanding. The Sioux City Vinegar Co. Case, 108 Iowa, 538, is quite similar. There, as is said in the opinion: “We have a case, then, of the secretary of a corporation, not-charged with the management of its affairs, who, being, served with an original notice, tossed it into a receptacle-for the purpose of having a member of a law firm of which he was also a member prepare an answer and defend, which notice was by him misplaced by oversight, without mentioning the action to any one, or giving it the slightest attention. That there was no unavoidable casualty or misfortune appears from a mere statement of the facts. It was rather a case where the officer on whom the notice was served forgot or neglected bo give the matter any proper attention. That under such circumstances relief cannot be had is well settled.”
The Church Case was one of pure forgetfulness on the part of the attorney, not induced by any ^misunderstanding. It is said in that case: “Mr. Gall’s failure to inform Mr. Clark, as he had promised to do, was not caused by accident, surprise, unavoidable casualty, or misfortune, but was clearly the result of his own neglect.” In the case at bar there was neglect to appear, it is true, but this failure was wholly due to misunderstanding. The only one of the cases which tends *187to support plaintiff's contention is Byrnes v. Insurance Co., 114 Iowa, 738. But in that case there was no mutual misunderstanding between client and attorney. “The most that can be said is that the secretary of the insurance company thought he had employed an attorney to defend from the fact that he had misplaced the papers connected with the case. He did not state that he had employed counsel, although he said that he had talked with one two or three times, and he concluded his showing with a statement that the default was due to his misplacing the papers, and to misapprehension on his part as to what had been done.” Of this showing we said: “About all that is disclosed here is a matter of carelessness and inattention on the part of the officer.” The inapplicability of this case to the facts now before us is apparent. Here the officer of the company immediately went to the general counsel, talked with him about the case, was advised there was a defense, agreed with counsel as to who should be employed, and supposed from what was said that this counsel would notify local attorneys. The general attorney, from the same conversation, understood that the officers of the company would notify local counsel. If this was not a mistake and misunderstanding, it would be-hard to imagine a case having these elements.
Plaintiff further contends that a large discretion was vested in the district court in this matter, and that its action denying the motion should not be reversed, in the' absence of a showing of passion or prejudice. True it is that such rulings are largely discretionary, but it is also true that this discretion is a sound legal one, which, if erroneously, arbitrarily, or oppressively exercised, will be reviewed, and in the interest of justice and right may be set aside. We have already referred to the rule that we will be more inclined to interfere when the motion has been denied than where granted, for the very sound and obvious reason that trials on the merits are to be favored.
*188Further, it is contended that there is no sufficient affidavit of merits; that the answer interposed by defendant presents a mere technical defense, and that ■on the whole case justice would be subserved by sustaining the action of the trial court. The affidavit of merits accompanjdng the motion states that defendant was not guilty of any negligence; that plaintiff assumed the risk of the wires in the condition they were in, and was guilty of contributory negligence; and that the electric ■company was solely responsible for the injury. The motion was also accompanied by an answer, which has been treated by all parties as an affidavit of merits, .or as supplementary thereto. This pleads facts which tend to show no negligence on the part of defendant. Whether or not they are sufficient in law we have no occasion now to determine, and do not do so. It also pleads assumption of risk on the part of plaintiff and contributory negligence, and also ■denies that plaintiff was injured to the extent claimed. These defenses are not technical, but some, if not all, go to the very vitals of the case.
We are constrained to hold that the motion should have been sustained, and the order denying it must be REVERSED.