Comstock Mill & Mining Co. v. Allen

31 P. 434, 21 Nev. 325
CourtNevada Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 5, 1892
DocketNo. 1345.
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 31 P. 434 (Comstock Mill & Mining Co. v. Allen) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nevada Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Comstock Mill & Mining Co. v. Allen, 31 P. 434, 21 Nev. 325 (Neb. 1892).

Opinion

By the Court,

Bigelow, J.:

This action was brought under the statute of 1889, p. 107, to •determine the priority of rights to the use of the water of the Carson river. A motion by some of the defendants to set aside the notice of the action was sustained by the court, whereupon the petitioner moved to dismiss the cause; this motion was granted, and judgment entered for the defendants for costs of suit, amounting to two hundred dollars and twenty-five cents. A motion by the petitioner to retax the costs was partly overruled, and from this order the appeal is taken.

The first question which presents itself is whether this court has jurisdiction of the appeal, the amount involved being less than three hundred dollars.

It is admitted that the case, as brought in the district court, is one that this court could have had jurisdiction of upon appeal, had it not been dismissed by the petitioner; but it is contended, as we understand the matter, that this dismissal ended *328 the case as such; that if before such dismissal it had been a case in equity, after, it became a mere money demand for less than three hundred dollars. But there does not seem to be any sufficient reason for supposing that the dismissal had the effect of so entirely separating the proceedings. The “case” still existed for all proper and necessary purposes; if an execution were issued, it would certainly be in that case, and the motion to retax the costs was as much a part of the case as was the filing of the complaint or the order for judgment.

A case is defined to be an action, suit, or proceeding. It embraces everything from the filing of the complaint to the entry of satisfaction of the judgment. They are all steps in, or parts of, the same case. It being admitted that this court has jurisdiction of the “ case,” this necessarily means that it has jurisdiction of every part of it, in so far at least as the legislature has made provision for the parts being brought up on appeal. The statute provides that there may be an appeal from certain preliminary orders, from the final judgment, or from any special order made after judgment. The right to appeal from such special order is of equal rank and dignity with the right to appeal from the judgment. One right in no manner depends upon the other. It is the case as made in the district court, and not the amount involved in the appeal, that gives the right to appeal. This was so held in regard to a judgment in Klein v. Allenbach, 6 Nev. 159, and in Solomon v. Reese, 34 Cal. 28.

The case being a proper one, the time and manner of taking the appeal become a mere matter of statutory regulation. Whether the appeal may be from a part of the case at a time, or only from the whole of it at once, is for the legislature alone to determine. (Burbank v. Rivers, 20 Nev. 81.) The statute provides for an appeal from “any special order made after judgment.” The right is given without limitation or restriction. Why then attach to it the condition that the order must not have been made in a case in which the party has consented to the judgment, or in which he has lost the right to appeal from the judgment? He has never consented to the order, and his consent to the judgment will not make the order any the less injurious to him, nor in any way affect its legality when made. Its correctness in no wise depends upon the judgment, but upon entirely extraneous matters.

*329 Wilde v. Wilde, 2 Nev. 306, seems squarely in point. There, in an action for divorce, judgment had gone in favor of the defendant. Subsequently the court made an order for him to pay the plaintiff one hundred and ninety-three dollars and twenty-five cents as alimony pendente lite, and as expenses of suit. From this order the defendant appealed, and in considering the question of jurisdiction, the court said: “ It is urged that this court has no jurisdiction in this ease, because the amount ordered to be paid is less than three hundred dollars. This court has jurisdiction in all chancery eases, whatever may be the amount in controversy. This comes within the jurisdiction of this court. The order complained of was made after judgment, and is therefore an appealable order under the statute.” Inline with this, it was held that where the case was not one which could be appealed, no appeal could be maintained from an order made subsequent to judgment. (Gorton v. Ferdinando, 64 Cal. 11; Hayne, New Trials & App. pp. 524, 589.)

In California it was at one time held that there could be no appeal from an order striking out a statement on motion for a new trial, but this was overruled in Calderwood v. Peyser, 42 Cal. 110, where Wallace, J., in pronouncing the opinion of the court, used this language: “ The case at bar is one involving the title of certain real estate, and, as a case, is therefore clearly embraced within the appellate jurisdiction of this court. A case is a state of facts which furnishes occasion for the exercise of the jurisdiction of a court of justice. To the existence of such a case parties are necessary; also pleadings and proceedings. Trials, orders, judgments, etc., usually follow. These together constitute the case, and when, as here, that case is itself one within the appellate jurisdiction of this court, amj order made therein by the court below becomes a part of it, and must consequently be subject to the power of this court to review it. * * * Accordingly the statute allows an appeal to be taken directly .from any special order made after final judgment, as the only safe and convenient method for its review. The statute declares such an order made subsequently in point of time to the rendition of the judgment, to be the subject of a distinct appeal, and we are not at liberty to add that it must also be an order made in the direct line of the procedure.” That an appeal will lie from any such subsequent order has now become the settled doctrine in California (Stonesifer v. Kilburn, 29 Pac. Rep. *330 332), as well as in our own state (Marshall v. Golden Fleece, etc., Co., 16 Nev. 156).

Mr. Hayne, in his work on New Trials (page 584), says: It results that any order which is subsequent in point of time to the judgment is a ‘ special order made after final judgment,’ and is appealable. * * * So that the rule is that a;nij order subsequent in point of time to the entry of judgment is appeal-able.” This, indeed, is the plain language of the statute, and there seems to be no reason for attaching to the right of appeal conditions that- are not found therein.

What we have already said will sufficiently indicate our views upon the objection that there can be no appeal from the order re-taxing the costs of an action, and that the question of costs can only be considered upon an appeal from the judgment. This was at one time the rule in California, under a similar statute, but it is now held there, as we think correctly, that where the question of costs arises subsequently to the entry of judgment, an appeal from the order is the correct and only remedy. (Hayne?. New Trials & App.

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Bluebook (online)
31 P. 434, 21 Nev. 325, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/comstock-mill-mining-co-v-allen-nev-1892.