Willis v. Wansley
Willis v. Wansley
Opinion of the Court
The plaintiff sues to annul a judgment which the defendant obtained against him in September, 1870, on the ground of fraudl and ill-practices by said defendant and his attorney, H. P. Wells.
The allegations, in substance, are: That Wansley sued Willis on a> promissory note for $880 and interest: that Wansley allowed the suit to rest from term to term, his counsel (Wells) assuring Willis that the-claim was extinguished by prescription, and that it was entirely unnecessary for Willis to employ counsel to defend the suit; that after he-had thus lulled Willis into a feeling of perfect security that his case would either be abandoned or not prosecuted, he waited patiently until a judicial day of the district court should arrive, when Willis would be absent; that at last this auspicious moment arrived, in September, 1870, when this counsel of Wansley induced Colonel C. H.. Morrison, upon the specious assurance that it was for Willis’ benefit, to' appear without any lawful authority as an attorney, and file for him. the plea of prescription, which he declared to Morrison would dismiss-the case; that Morrison fell into the trap so ingeniously set for him,, filed the plea of prescription, when Wansley (whose presence or proximity was unknown to Morrison) suddenly made his appearance on the-stand as a witness, and falsely swore that the claim had been taken, out of prescription by the acknowledgment of Willis in 1863.
The answer is a general denial.
The court gave judgment for the defendant, and the plaintiff' appealed.
In the suit which resulted in the judgment sought to be annulled,, there was an answer filed for Willis, by his counsel, Farrar & Reeves, in which the general issue and the plea of usury were set uj). These> attorneys, however, were not present at the trial.
This witness also testifies that he was not employed by Willis, and in explanation of his course he says: “After I found that judgment was rendered against the defendant I made an effort to obtain a new •trial, but was disappointed. I then asked for and obtained an order •for an appeal, and subsequently attended to the case in the Supreme ■Court.”
Willis and Wells both gave evidence in the case, and their testimony ■conflicts as to the conversations which they had previous to the trial, and which Willis contends misled him and lulled him into security.
The judgment complained of was rendered in September, 1870, and the suit had been pending since August, 1866, four years.
On the seventeenth September, 1870, the day the judgment was signed, Willis arrived and was informed by Colonel Morrison that judgment had been rendered against him and the case was pending on an application for a new trial, which he hoped to get.
Willis, who knew all the facts of the case, as he testifies, in a short
It was the duty of the plaintiff, for whom Morrison appeared as-counsel without authority, to have repudiated his acts as soon as informed thereof. The fact that he permitted him knowingly to continue the litigation for nearly a year thereafter, until the final disposition of the case in this court, satisfies us of his ratification of the acts-of Morrison in his behalf.
He had no right to demand the nullity of the judgment because the attorney who acted for him was without authority, alter permitting-that attorney to continue the litigation, and after taking the chances-of a favorable judgment in this court. If the judgment of this court had been in his favor, it is quite evident that no objection would have-been made, because if he did not rely on the defense made for him by Morrison, he would not have permitted him to take the appeal and-continue the litigation. If dissatisfied, he would not have permitted the unauthorized defense to continue; he would have demanded the-nullity of the judgment on the ground that the attorney had no-authority to represent him.
We are constrained, however, to say that the conduct of IT. P: Wells, attorney at law, in this matter is not approved by the court.
Judgment affirmed.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- John W. Willis v. John W. Wansley
- Status
- Published