Barrett v. Smith

237 N.W. 15, 183 Minn. 431, 1931 Minn. LEXIS 960
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedMay 29, 1931
DocketNos. 28,341, 28,342.
StatusPublished
Cited by64 cases

This text of 237 N.W. 15 (Barrett v. Smith) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Barrett v. Smith, 237 N.W. 15, 183 Minn. 431, 1931 Minn. LEXIS 960 (Mich. 1931).

Opinion

Stone, J.

Defendant Cedar Lake Ice & Fuel Company is a Delaware corporation licensed to do ’business in this state. It has its principal office and all of its business 'is transacted in Minneapolis. The other defendants are its directors and managing officers. Plaintiffs are minority stockholders. In this action they charge defendants, particularly defendant Smith as treasurer and general manager and defendant Ellison as president, with mismanagement and conversion of corporate funds. By the decision below plaintiffs were awarded in part for the benefit of the corporation, and denied in part, the relief they seek. Among the things denied was the appointment of a receiver to wind up the affairs of the corporation in this state. Both plaintiffs and defendants moved for amended findings or a new trial, and both appeal from orders denying such motions. We shall state the facts piecemeal as needed to develop the several points for decision.

*433 At the outset we have a question of procedure. The decision below' was made May 13, 1930. Defendants made two motions for amended findings or a new trial. The first, heard June 7, 1930, was denied by an order filed July 14, served on counsel for defendants July 15, 1930. Defendants’ second motion (made July 29) was .based upon the same general grounds first urged. Set for August 8, it was continued by consent to September 16. Then plaintiffs objected because of the previous motion and expiration of the time for appeal from the order denying it. September 16, 1930, brought the order denying defendants’ last motion but reciting plaintiffs’ objection and that it had been overruled. From, that order defendants appeal. They are met by a motion to dismiss. Plaintiffs argue that the powrer of the district court in respect to granting or denying a motion for a new trial is exhausted after one such motion has been determined and the time for appeal has expired.

That defendants’ second motion was considered on the merits is plain from the recital, in the order, of plaintiffs’ objection and the statement that it was overruled. That was the equivalent of an order granting leave for the second motion. McLaughlin v. City of Breckenridge, 122 Minn. 154, 141 N. W. 1134, 142 N. W. 134; Fletcher v. Southern Colonization Co. 148 Minn. 143, 181 N. W. 205; First T. & S. Bank v. U. S. F. & G. Co. 156 Minn. 231, 194 N. W. 376; LaPlante v. Knutson, 174 Minn. 344, 219 N. W. 184. But all the time the first order remained in effect, with nothing to stay the running of the time for appeal or extend its duration.

As to the power of the district court, after the time for appeal has expired, to reconsider an appealable order or to permit a .renewal of the motion or a second motion for the same relief, our decisions are in an unsatisfactory state. They have the background of statutory law set up by G. S. 1923 (2 Mason, 1927) § 9283. That section first declares the power of the district court, subject to limitations not now important, to relieve a party from any judgment, order, or other proceeding taken against him through his mistake, inadvertence, surprise, or excusable neglect. Then, disjunctively and by way of addition, follows the declaration that “for *434 good cause shown” the court may “modify or set aside its judgments, orders, or proceedings.”

In Beckett v. N. W. Masonic Aid Assn. 67 Minn. 298, 69 N. W. 923, 924, it was considered that Grant v. Schmidt, 22 Minn. 1; Semrow v. Semrow, 23 Minn. 214; and Weld v. Weld, 28 Minn. 33, 8 N. W. 900, expressed a too limited view of the court's power over its own orders and judgments. The holding there [67 Minn. 301] was that the statute just referred to, passed in 1876 after the decision in Grant v. Schmidt, 22 Minn. 1, “was clearly intended to do away with the rule of law” there laid down. It was not mentioned that in the Grant, Semrow, and Weld cases judgments rather than orders were in question.

In the Beckett case, 67 Minn. 298, 301, 69 N. W. 923, the court said:

“The order granting a new trial was set aside before the time to appeal from it expired, and we are clearly of the opinion that said amendment [now § 9283] gave the court below authority to set it aside, if deemed erroneous.”

In 5 Dunnell, Minn. Dig. (2 ed.) § 7081, there is the statement:

“The district court has power to set aside an order granting a new trial, on the ground that such order was erroneously granted, any time before the period for appeal expires.” The cases cited in support are Beckett v. N. W. Masonic Aid Assn. 67 Minn. 298, 69 N. W. 923; Cox v. Selover, 165 Minn. 50, 205 N. W. 691, 692; Duffy v. Stratton, 169 Minn. 136, 210 N. W. 866.

We have just considered the Beckett case, 67 Minn. 298, 69 N. W. 923. In the other two the point was not involved. The decision in Cox v. Selover, 165 Minn. 50, 205 N. W. 691, depended upon an application not of § 9283 but of § 9326 (G. S. 1923 [2 Mason, 1927]) providing that a motion for a new trial, made on the minutes of the court, must be heard within 30 days after the coming in of the verdict unless the time be extended by written stipulation or by the court for. cause. That statute is mandatory but applies only to motions for new trial made on the minutes of the court. Cox v. *435 Selover, 165 Minn. 50, 52, 205 N. W. 691, expressly affirms the general “power of the court to vacate its orders.”

In Duffy v. Stratton, 169 Minn. 136, 210 N. W. 866, the vacating order came within the time for appeal. The present question did not arise and was not even referred to. In National Citizens Bank v. McKinley, 111 Minn. 214, 126 N. W. 526, a litigant was permitted, in effect, to renew a motion for a new trial without suggestion even that the expiration of the time for appeal was important one way or the other. In Pulver v. Commercial Security Co. 135 Minn. 286, 160 N. W. 781, and in Peterson v. Parviainen, 174 Minn. 297, 219 N. W. 180, it was assumed that the power of the district court to modify or vacate an appealable order expired with the time allowed for appeal.

Directly contrary to that assumption is the decision in First Nat. Bank v. Briggs, 34 Minn. 266, 26 N. W. 6. There an appeal-able order was made dissolving an attachment. Before the expiration of the time for appeal the court granted an order to show cause why it should not be vacated. Upon the hearing the court reconsidered the whole issue and made a new order affirming the original dissolving the attachment. From the last order the appeal •was taken, but more than 30 days after notice of the original order.

The decision was [34 Minn. 267] that while the time for appeal cannot be extended, “it may, however, result from the exercise of the authority of the court to review, set aside, or modify its own orders, that upon an appeal from an order redetermining a matter once passed upon by a former order, made more than 30 days before such appeal was taken, there may be brought up for review the same questions involved in the former order.”

As to appealable orders other than those denying new trials, we do not hold that they cannot be reviewed by the court making them after expiration of the time for appeal. In Fletcher v. Southern Colonization Co. 148 Minn. 143, 181 N. W.

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Bluebook (online)
237 N.W. 15, 183 Minn. 431, 1931 Minn. LEXIS 960, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/barrett-v-smith-minn-1931.