Citation Numbers: 25 S.E. 877, 119 N.C. 311
Judges: Clare
Filed Date: 9/5/1896
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/19/2024
This case differs widely from Willis v. R. R., post, 718. There the agreement, which was admitted, was that the papers "should be sent" to the appellee's counsel. They were accordingly sent to him by express, and there was ample time, if he had promptly notified the appellant's counsel that he had not intended to waive service, for (312) the case to have been served by an officer. This Court held that, upon the admitted agreement, the appellant's counsel had reasonable ground to understand that service had been waived; and, besides, the appellee's counsel, under such circumstances, by delaying several days after he received notice that the papers were in the express office for him, and till too late for legal service, to notify appellee's counsel of the mistake, was estoppel from insisting that the case could not be legally served after the time limited.
In the present case, the agreement, which is in writing, provides: "Next term of Brunswick Court fixed for settlement of the case on appeal, appellants to serve case on the plaintiff at least a week before said court." This certainly extended the time of service, which is not denied, but so far from waiving service, it contemplates service, which means, of course, legal service. No other agreement is averred, but the appellants rely upon an affidavit that Mr. Cutlar on the last day (Saturday) upon which the case could have been served asked Mr. Rountree in Wilmington to accept service, who replied that he had no authority to do so, and to mail the papers to the other counsel in Whiteville, who three days thereafter notified the appellant's counsel that they would not accept service. As Mr. Rountree had no authority to accept service, he could not reasonably have been understood as waiving service, and Mr. Cutlar should at once have had the case legally served, especially as the agreed time for service was about to expire. Nor is there any estoppel, upon the appellee's counsel by their failure to promptly return the case; for, if returned by the next mail, the time for service would have expired, and their conduct could not have misled the appellant's counsel to their detriment. In these two essential particulars the case (313) differs from Wills v. R. R., post, 718. Affidavits are filed by the appellee's counsel, reciting, among other things that the appellant's counsel had given them notice that "no favors would be given or received," that Mr. Cutlar had since stated to them that his real *Page 183
reason for sending the case by mail was that he did not know that the law required service by an officer, and expressly denying any written or verbal agreement to waive the service, or for service other than by an officer having been made between counsel. Indeed the appellants seem to rely greatly upon "the liberal practice heretofore prevailing among the members of the bar in the southeastern part of the State." Pearson, C. J., inWilson v. Hutchison,
CERTIORARI DENIED.