Feldman v. Katz

325 P.2d 597, 160 Cal. App. 2d 836, 1958 Cal. App. LEXIS 2189
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMay 27, 1958
DocketCiv. 22661
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 325 P.2d 597 (Feldman v. Katz) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Feldman v. Katz, 325 P.2d 597, 160 Cal. App. 2d 836, 1958 Cal. App. LEXIS 2189 (Cal. Ct. App. 1958).

Opinion

PATROSSO, J. pro. tem. *

Appeal by plaintiff and cross-defendants from an order denying their motion for a new trial *837 made pursuant to section 953e of the Code of Civil Procedure upon the ground of the impossibility of securing a phonographic report of the proceedings had upon the trial due to the death of the stenographic reporter.

This action was instituted by plaintiff to quiet title to and recover possession of an improved parcel of real property in the city of Los Angeles. The defendants filed an answer and cross-complaint. The latter was directed against the plaintiff and other named cross-defendants and thereby defendants sought specific performance of an alleged oral contract for the sale of the real property in question or in the alternative for damages.

The following facts are made to appear without conflict:

On September 5, 1956, judgment was entered in favor of the defendants and cross-complainants and against the plaintiff and cross-defendants. On September 28, 1956, the present attorney for the plaintiff and cross-defendants was substituted in the place and stead of their former attorney of record who had participated in the trial of the action. On October 8, 1956, plaintiff and cross-defendants filed notice of appeal from the judgment and on October 10, 1956, they filed a notice to the clerk to prepare clerk’s and reporter’s transcripts upon appeal. On November 1, 1956, counsel for the appellants was advised by the trial judge that Mrs. Price, the stenographic reporter who had acted as such upon the hearing of the cause, had suffered a stroke and was disabled from transcribing her notes and that her notes could not be transcribed by any other reporter. An effort was thereupon made to have other reporters in the shorthand pool transcribe her notes, but none was found who was able to do so and Mrs. Price in the meantime died.

Following Mrs. Price’s death, and on November 28, 1956, appellants filed their notice of motion for a new trial pursuant to Code of Civil Procedure, section 953e. Accompanying the notice of motion was an affidavit by appellants’ counsel which recited the facts hereinbefore stated. In addition, the affidavit avers that the trial judge had advised counsel for the appellants to communicate with the attorney for the respondents as well as the former attorney for the appellants in an endeavor to work out an agreed statement of the facts of the ease; that appellants’ attorney did call the former attorney for the appellants and was by him advised “that he, in all fairness to his former clients, could not arrive at an agree *838 ment as to the statement of facts because of the many variances in the testimony of the witnesses at the trial, and the absence of any written notes to assist him in reconstructing said testimony.” Said former counsel further advised appellants’ attorney that the trial had occupied four days ‘‘and that many factual issues developed at the trial including rulings on objections to testimony, both oral and documentary, and that he had no recollection of all of said issues or rulings.” . The affidavit further avers that present counsel for the appellants ‘‘has no knowledge whatsoever of the facts of the ease and was unable to obtain a detailed analysis of the testimony of the various witnesses from his clients.”

In opposition to the motion, counsel for the respondents filed an affidavit wherein none of the facts hereinabove recited is denied but in which it is stated that in conversations with the present attorney for the appellants he informed him ‘‘of his willingness to endeavor to agree on a Statement of Facts; that if an attempt had been made to agree on a statement of Facts, a satisfactory Statement might and probably could have been agreed upon, ’ ’ but none was submitted or proposed.

The motion for new trial came on for hearing on November 30, 1956, before Judge McKesson who had tried the case and was continued for 10 days by Judge McKesson in order to permit Mr. Van Horn, a certified shorthand reporter and the son-in-law of the deceased reporter, to make a further effort to have the notes of the deceased reporter transcribed, but Mr. Van Horn, as he avers in his affidavit, was unsuccessful in his attempt to find anyone capable of transcribing the notes. In the intervening period, Judge McKesson was appointed District Attorney of Los Angeles County and the hearing of the motion was thereupon transferred to Judge Ford, by whom it was heard on December 18, 1956, and denied on December 28, 1956.

The rule is well settled that there is no compulsion upon a trial court to grant a new trial under section 953e; that the exercise of power by the court under that section is discretionary and whether the court has abused its discretion depends on the facts of the particular case. Such discretion is not unlimited but is a legal discretion, the exercise of which is reviewable. (Fickett v. Rauch (1947), 31 Cal.2d 110, 112 [187 P.2d 402].)

Recognizing the rule to be as above stated, the appellants contend that under the circumstances present in the *839 case at bar, a denial of their motion for a new trial constituted an abuse of discretion, and we are constrained to agree.

Respondents concede that, as in the case last cited, where the order denying a motion for new trial under section 953e was reversed, the appellants here were diligent in taking their appeal and in undertaking to secure a clerk’s and reporter’s transcript. It is likewise admitted that due to the disability of the reporter and her subsequent death, and the inability to find another reporter who could read her notes, it was impossible to secure a transcript of the proceedings had upon the trial. The only reason assigned by respondents in support of the trial court’s ruling is that appellants did not make a diligent effort to prepare a record, either by way of an agreed statement or settled statement pursuant to rule 4(e) of Rules on Appeal. However, it appears from the affidavit of appellants’ present counsel that he did, in accordance with Judge McKesson’s suggestion, communicate with the former attorney for the appellants as well as the attorney for the respondents with respect to the preparation of a statement of the ease and that he was advised by appellants’ former counsel that due to the length of the trial and the fact that he had no notes of the testimony of the various witnesses, he was not in a position to furnish the factual data necessary for the preparation of such a statement. Under the circumstances it was manifestly impossible for the appellants’ present counsel, who had not participated in the trial, to undertake the preparation of any such record unless he could obtain the requisite information with respect thereto from former counsel. It must be remembered too, that present counsel for appellants was substituted in the case before the appeal was taken and before the disability of the court reporter occurred, and when the substitution was effected no one had reason to believe that there would be any difficulty in securing the necessary transcript of the oral proceedings.

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Bluebook (online)
325 P.2d 597, 160 Cal. App. 2d 836, 1958 Cal. App. LEXIS 2189, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/feldman-v-katz-calctapp-1958.