Duff v. Fisher

15 Cal. 375
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 1, 1860
StatusPublished
Cited by27 cases

This text of 15 Cal. 375 (Duff v. Fisher) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Duff v. Fisher, 15 Cal. 375 (Cal. 1860).

Opinion

Field, C. J. delivered the opinion of the Court

Cope, J. and Baldwin, J. concurring.

[379]*379This is a suit in equity, and when called for trial, issues involving the entire matters in controversy were framed by both parties, settled by the Court, and submitted without objection to a jury. These issues were all found in favor of the plaintiff, and upon his motion the decree was rendered thereon. No exception was taken to the findings, nor was any motion made to the Court to set them aside. The statement on appeal is a mere transcript of the evidence addressed to the jury, and upon this evidence the appellants insist the case must be determined, irrespective of the findings. The question is thus presented as to the effect to be given in an equity case to the findings of a jury, when they are received without objection. The question is an important one of practice, but free, as we conceive, of any difficulty.

Under the old chancery system, the issues framed were sent to the Courts of law, and upon their trial, the course of proceedings was the same as that followed in ordinary trials at law, unless special directions were given upon the subject. And the verdict or findings of the jury were certified to the Chancellor without evidence, which was not called for except upon express application, with a view to a motion for a new trial. If the findings were not challenged by the party against whom they were rendered, or disregarded by the Chancellor upon his own view of the whole case before him, they stood as conceded facts. The evidence upon such issues, taken before a different tribunal, formed, of course, no part of the record before the Chancellor. If, however, the findings were objected to, the evidence was presented upon a statement prepared for that purpose, and brought before the Court on a motion for a new trial. The evidence then became a part of the record, and the order made on the motion a subject of review on appeal.

When no motion was made, and the Chancellor rested satisfied with the verdict of the jury, the facts found were taken in the further consideration of the case as established and settled, and the decision followed in conformity therewith. (2 Daniell’s Ch. Plead. and Pr. 1301; 2 Smith’s Ch. Pr. 74; Attorney General v. Montgomery, 2 Atkyns, 378.)

As the object of the issue and trial at law, according to the theory of equity proceedings, was to inform the conscience of the Court, it followed that the findings were not held conclusive or binding, but the Chancellor was at liberty to disregard them entirely, and proceed with the hearing of the case as though no issue had been framed, or to direct the matter to be tried anew before another jury. This general discretion to disregard the findings may be qualified and controlled by statute, [380]*380“and in nearly all the States,” observes the learned editor of the American edition of Adams’ Equity, “it is at least very doubtful whether a verdict on an issue is not equally binding with that in a suit at law, and subject only to the same revisory power which is exercised in granting new trials in other cases.” (Adams’ Eq. 376, ed. 1855, note; 3 Green Ev. sec. 261 et seq.)

In this State, the statute provides the manner in which the verdict of a jury, upon an issue submitted to its decision, may be reviewed. It is only by a motion for a new trial. The Practice Act applies as well to equitable as to legal actions, so far as its provisions are consistent with the rights and remedies administered in Courts of Equity. It may be, and probably is true, that the Court, whether sitting in equity or on trial of a common law action, may, of its own motion, set aside the verdict of a jury when it is clearly and palpably against the evidence; but when the Court is satisfied with the verdict, the parties can only question its correctness by following the course pointed out by the statute. If that course be not taken, neither party can object to the finding in the appellate Court. As, in the case at bar, no objection was interposed to the findings of the jury, they must be taken as established facts to support the decree. The decision of this Court in Walker v. Sedgwick, (5 Cal. 192) to which reference is made by the appellants, does not controvert the conclusions to which we have arrived. That case was tried by the Judge, without a jury, and the question was, whether or not the Court erred in failing to find the facts and conclusions of law, and this Court held that the regulations of the statute requiring such findings in actions tried by the Court, did not apply to equity cases. We are not, at this late day, disposed to question the correctness of this decision. The one hundred and seventy-ninth section of the Practice Act provides the manner in which a jury may be waived, and the following section provides that upon the trial of an issue of fact by the Court, the decision shall be given in writing, and shall state the facts and the conclusions of law separately. Taking the two sections together, the conclusion was at least reasonable, that the latter section applied only to those actions where a trial by jury was a matter of right, and was waived, as provided in the previous section. The decision does not touch the question presented in the case at bar. In Gray v. Eaton, (5 Cal. 448) an appeal was taken from an order refusing a new trial upon issues framed in an equity suit, and the Court held that 'the application for the new trial was supererogatory, because the Judge had not decided [381]*381upon the verdict, and that if he had, it was a matter in his mere discretion to grant or refuse the application, which was not revisable. The statute was, evidently, not called to the attention of the Court, and the decision cannot, in consequence; be regarded as of any binding authority. In Dewey v. Bowman, (8 Cal. 145) the case was tried without a jury. In Still v. Saunders, (Id. 281) the question was upon testimony admitted and instructions given to the jury, and the decision therein is stated as the legitimate conclusion of the principles settled in the previous cases which we have cited. Of those cases, the only one which justifies the decision is that of Gray v. Eaton, which, as we have stated, was made without notice of the provisions of the statute.

It follows from the views we have expressed, that the findings of the jury cannot for the first time be questioned in this Court, and that they must, for the determination of the appeal, be taken as true. The case is thus left to rest upon the judgment roll. The findings fully support the decree, and the only objections, not founded upon the evidence, are to the complaint; that it does not disclose a case for specific performance, and does not allege a sufficient tender. The contract related to realty as well as personalty, and were it otherwise, the fact would not oust' the jurisdiction. The equity upon which the Court enforces a specific performance of a contract, does not arise from the character of the property involved, but from the inadequate remedy afforded by a recovery of damages in an action at law. (Adams’ Equity, 77.)

The tender of payment is alleged in general terms, and the point of objection is its uncertainty as to time. It is alleged to have been repeatedly made, which was of course before suit brought, and is accompanied with the averment that the plaintiff has at all times been, and still is ready and willing to pay. The tender should have been stated with greater particularity, but the objection cannot be taken for the first time in this Court.

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Bluebook (online)
15 Cal. 375, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/duff-v-fisher-cal-1860.