Gunter v. Dowdy, 224 N.C. 522 (1944)

Oct. 11, 1944 · Supreme Court of North Carolina
224 N.C. 522

MRS. GOLIE D. GUNTER v. CURTIS V. DOWDY, HOWARD N. BUTLER and ROSCOE WILLIAMS.

(Filed 11 October, 1944.)

1. Judgments § 22b—

Tbe clerk of tbe Superior Court bas authority, upon such terms as may be just, at any time within one year after notice thereof, to relieve a party from an irregular judgment or one taken against him by mistake, inadvertence, surprise, or excusable neglect; and, on appeal in such cases from tbe clerk, tbe judge shall hear and pass upon tbe matter de novo, finding the facts and entering bis judgment accordingly. G. S., 1-220.

2. Judgments § 22e—

Where plaintiff issued summons and filed complaint, serving both on defendant, who in apt time employed an attorney to make answer and resist the suit, and judgment by default was taken by plaintiff, no answer having been filed in consequence of the illness and death of the wife of defendant’s attorney and the prolonged illness of the attorney himself, such circumstances constitute excusable neglect under G. S., 1-220.

3. Judgments § 22c—

. On motion, within the year, to set aside a judgment by default or excusable neglect, the findings by the court are conclusive when supported by competent evidence.

4. Judgments § 22e: Attorney and Client § 7—

Excusable neglect of an attorney, who fails to file an answer for the defendants, may not be attributable to his clients.

Appeal by plaintiff from Parker, J., at March Term, 1944, of Chatham.

This is an appeal by the plaintiff from a judgment of the judge presiding vacating a judgment by default made by the clerk that the plaintiff was the owner of the land described in the complaint.

The plaintiff instituted this action in Chatham County against the defendant and on 8 March, 1943, in the absence of any answer, obtained from the clerk by default a judgment adjudicating her to be the owner of the land described in the complaint, and that any claim of title thereto by the defendants was wrongful and cast a cloud upon plaintiff’s title. Subsequently the defendants by proper motion applied to the clerk to have said default judgment vacated on account of excusable neglect, and the clerk allowed said motion and vacated said default judgment on 28 January, 1944; whereupon the plaintiff appealed from the order of the clerk vacating his former default judgment to the judge presiding, who rendered judgment at the March Term, 1944, of Chatham, vacating the former judgment by default entered by the clerk and from *523this action of tbe judge presiding tbe plaintiff appealed to tbe Supreme Court, assigning errors.

K. R. Hoyle for plaintiff, appellant.

Walter D. Siler for defendants, appellees.

ScheNCk, J.

Tbe question posed by tbis appeal is: Was tbe clerk authorized to vacate bis former judgment by default adjudging tbe plaintiff to be tbe owner of tbe land described in tbe complaint, and was tbe judge presiding authorized, on appeal from tbe clerk, to vacate said judgment by default? We are of tbe opinion, and so bold, that both tbe clerk and tbe judge presiding were so authorized.

Tbe answer to tbe question posed lies in G. S., 1-220 (formerly C. S., 600), which reads: “The judge shall, upon such terms as may be just, at any time within one year after notice thereof, relieve a party from a judgment, order, verdict or other proceeding taken against him through bis mistake, inadvertence, surprise, or excusable neglect, and may supply an omission in any proceeding. Tbe clerk may bear and pass upon motions to set aside judgments rendered by him, whether for irregularity or under tbis section, and an appeal from bis order on such motion shall lie to tbe judge at tbe next term, who shall bear and pass upon such motion de novo."

Tbe judge in bis judgment found as facts that the appeal was taken from tbe order of tbe clerk vacating bis former order by default; that tbe plaintiff caused summons to issue against tbe defendants, which summons with copies of tbe complaint were duly served on tbe defendants; that judgment by default, in tbe absence of answer, was entered by tbe clerk adjudging plaintiffs to be tbe owner of tbe land described in tbe complaint; that defendants in apt time employed W. P. Horton, an attorney, to file answer for them and do such other things as were deemed necessary for their defense, and made him aware of their defense to tbe action, but owing to tbe illness and death of said attorney’s wife and tbe prolonged illness of tbe attorney himself no answer was filed; that tbe defendants have, prima facie, a good title to tbe land involved; that tbe clerk entered order vacating bis former order by default adjudging plaintiff to be tbe owner of tbe land involved; that tbe failure of defendants’ attorney, W. P. Horton, to file answer, under tbe circumstances of tbis case, constituted excusable neglect. Since there was supporting evidence of each of tbe findings of fact of tbe judge such findings are conclusive. Lumber Co. v. Cottingham, 173 N. C., 323, 92 S. E., 9; Weil v. Woodard, 104 N. C., 94, 10 S. E., 129; Gaylord v. Berry, 169 N. C., 733, 86 S. E., 623; Manning v. R. R., 122 N. C., 824, 28 S. E., *524963; and Stith v. Jones, 119 N. C., 428, 25 S. E., 1022. Since tbe failure to file an answer was due to tbe excusable neglect of tbe attorney employed in apt time by tbe defendants, and since tbe defendants made sucb attorney aware of tbeir defense to tbe action, any failure or neglect of tbe attorney to file tbe answer could not be attributable to tbe defendants. Schiele v. Ins. Co., 171 N. C., 426, 88 S. E., 764; English v. English, 87 N. C., 497; Norton v. McLaurin, 125 N. C., 185, 34 S. E., 269; Mann v. Hall, 163 N. C., 50, 79 S. E., 437.

We bold tbat tbe judge presiding was authorized to enter tbe judgment appealed from, and tbat bis conclusion tbat tbe failure to file answer was due to excusable neglect of defendants’ attorney, and tbat sucb neglect was in nowise attributable to tbe defendants themselves is sustained by tbe facts found, which findings were supported by competent evidence, and for these reasons tbe judgment of tbe judge presiding should be affirmed. It is so ordered.

Affirmed.