Finkle v. Superior Court

234 P. 432, 71 Cal. App. 97, 1925 Cal. App. LEXIS 458
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJanuary 31, 1925
DocketDocket No. 4911.
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 234 P. 432 (Finkle v. Superior Court) 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
Finkle v. Superior Court, 234 P. 432, 71 Cal. App. 97, 1925 Cal. App. LEXIS 458 (Cal. Ct. App. 1925).

Opinion

FINLAYSON, P. J.

This is a proceeding in prohibition to prevent the superior court for San Bernardino County from proceeding with the retrial of an action after an order granting defendant’s motion for a new trial.

The action in which the new trial was granted is one in equity brought in the superior court for San Bernardino County by Sophia A. Finkle against F. C. FinkJe to cancel an agreement for the conveyance of real property. It was tried in that court before a jury on October 16, 1923, the Honorable J. A. Smith, Judge of the superior court for Calaveras County, presiding. A verdict for the plaintiff was returned by the jury. The verdict, though advisory only— the case being of equitable cognizance—was evidently adopted by the court, for it is shown by the petition that on February 29, 1924, a judgment in accordance with the verdict was entered in favor of the plaintiff in the action. On March 5, 1924, notice of the entry of the judgment was served upon the defendant, who, within due time and on notice given by him as required by law, moved the court, Judge Smith presiding, to grant a new trial of the cause. The motion was taken under submission, and on May 5, 1924— the last day allowed by the statute for acting upon the motion—Judge Smith, at Calaveras County, signed a written order in the case, which, after reciting the submission of the motion, reads as follows: “It is ordered that the motion for a new trial be and the same is hereby granted.” This order was mailed by Judge Smith to the county clerk of San Bernardino County, by whom it was received and filed at San Bernardino on May 7, 1924. Thereafter the petitioners here, as executors of the last will and testament of *100 Sophia A. Finkle (they having been substituted as parties plaintiff for their testatrix, who had died in the meantime), moved these respondents to vacate the order granting the new trial. The motion was denied, and respondents are about to go forward with the retrial of the case. It is to prevent such retrial that this proceeding was brought.

Petitioners contend that the order of Judge Smith granting the motion for a new trial is a nullity for the reason that it was not made by the court within two months after notice of the entry of the judgment, and that under section 660 of the Code of Civil Procedure such failure on the part of the court to act within the statutory period is tantamount to a denial of the motion.

An order passing upon a motion for new trial is not one which a judge of the superior court has the right to make at chambers. The powers of a judge at chambers are enumerated in section 166 of the Code of Civil Procedure, and the authority to pass upon a motion for new trial is not one of them. The determination of such a motion is a judicial act which, to be legal, must be performed by the court and not by a judge outside of the court. (Code Civ. Proc., sec. 660; Shepherd v. Superior Court, 54 Cal. App. 673 [202 Pac. 466]. See, also, Campbell v. Genshlea, 180 Cal. 217 [180 Pac. 336].)

A court, as defined in Von Schmidt v. Widber, 99 Cal. 512 [34 Pac. 110], is “a tribunal presided over by one or more judges, for the exercise of such judicial power as has been conferred upon it by law.” Blackstone defines it as “a place where justice is judicially administered”; and in Von Schmidt v. Widber, supra, it is said that it is essential “that the person or persons authorized to administer justice be at that place for the purpose of administering justice.” The order signed by Judge Smith at Calaveras County on May 5, 1924, was not an order made by the superior court for San Bernardino County. It was not a judicial act at the place designated by law as that where justice is required to be judicially administered by the court.

The eases cited by respondents to the effect that a written order signed by the judge is valid when signed are not in point, for here the order was not one which the judge could make out of court. Section 1004 of the Code of Civil *101 Procedure declares that “Orders made out of court may be made by the judge of the court in any part of the state.” Obviously this provision is applicable only to such orders as a judge may make at chambers, or elsewhere out of court. It can have no application to an order which only the court can make, such, for example, as an order passing upon a motion for a new trial. If the power to pass upon the motion for new trial were one which could have been exercised by Judge Smith at chambers, it doubtless would have been operative when signed, and its filing in the clerk’s office within the prescribed time would not have been essential to its validity. (Swift v. Canovan, 47 Cal. 86.) Or if the order had been rendered by Judge Smith in open court, a failure of the clerk to enter it in his minutes before the expiration of May 5th would not have defeated its operation as a court order, since the validity of an order made by the court does not depend upon the date of its entry. (Von Schmidt v. Widber, supra.) But that is not this case.

Respondents cite us to Comstock etc. Co. v. Superior Court, 57 Cal. 625, Walter v. Merced Academy Assn., 126 Cal. 582 [59 Pac. 136], and Estudillo v. Security etc. Co., 158 Cal. 66 [109 Pac. 884]—eases which hold that if the judge who presided at the trial of a case in the superior court for a certain county subsequently goes into another county, where he prepares and signs his findings of fact and an order directing the entry of judgment, and sends such findings and order to the clerk of the county where the case was tried, and the clerk files them, the proceedings are not void for want of jurisdiction. We fail to see how the doctrine of these cases can possibly aid respondents.. It is of course axiomatic that a case which has been tried and submitted for decision can be determined only by the court and not by the judge apart from the tribunal in which he presided during the trial. It is probably the theory of the decisions to which we have just adverted that when the findings of fact are filed and the clerk is ordered to enter a particular judgment thereon, the court, as a court, has acted. In Comstock etc. Co. v. Superior Court, supra, it is said that “the cause was not determined until the findings and order for judgment were filed with the clerk of the superior court.” In Walter v. Merced Academy Assn., supra, the court says that “until the decision and decree were *102 filed by the clerk in Merced County [the county where the case was tried] they were not in force.” According to the doctrine of these cases the order signed by Judge Smith could have no force or effect as a court order until it was received and filed by the clerk at San Bernardino. But that filing, which occurred on May 7, 1924, or two days after the expiration of the period during which the court possessed the power to grant a new trial, came too late to be effective as an order of the court.

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Bluebook (online)
234 P. 432, 71 Cal. App. 97, 1925 Cal. App. LEXIS 458, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/finkle-v-superior-court-calctapp-1925.