Fish v. Benson

12 P. 454, 71 Cal. 428, 1886 Cal. LEXIS 606
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 18, 1886
DocketNo. 9451
StatusPublished
Cited by44 cases

This text of 12 P. 454 (Fish v. Benson) 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
Fish v. Benson, 12 P. 454, 71 Cal. 428, 1886 Cal. LEXIS 606 (Cal. 1886).

Opinion

Searls, C.

This is an action of ejectment to recover certain premises situate in Contra Costa County.

Plaintiffs had judgment, from which, and from an order denying a new trial, the defendants appeal.

Respondents move to dismiss the appeal, so far as it relates to the order denying a new trial.

The appeal was taken within the sixty days provided by statute therefor after entry of the order denying the new trial.

If the notice of the motion was not given, or the bill [431]*431of exceptions not filed in time, and this is made to properly appear in the record, the fact may constitute a reason for affirming the order denying the new trial, but is no ground for dismissing the appeal from the order.

In other words, an appeal is given as matter of right from an order granting or denying a new trial. If the proceedings on the motion anterior to the order are' irregular or defective, such irregularity or defect is not cause for dismissing the appeal, but may, upon a proper showing, be passed upon in determining the same.

In the view we have taken, it may be conceded to the appellants that the proceedings on motion for new trial were had in time, and that the bill of exceptions is properly before us.

To the consideration of the affidavits found in the record, objection is made by respondents upon the ground that they are not identified as having been used on the motion for a new trial.

These affidavits are marked as filed by the clerk of the court in which the action is pending, but are .not contained in and form no part of the bill of exceptions and statement certified by the judge, and are not identified by him in any way as having been used on the motion, unless a reference in the order denying a new trial to the affidavits of certain persons in such order named, whose names are appended to some of the affidavits in the record, can be deemed to identify them or a portion of them.

In Johnson v. Muir, 43 Cal. 542, the court, in referring to affidavits on motion for a new trial, said: —

But in such a case it is required that the affidavits should be identified by the indorsement of the judge or clerk, made at the time of hearing, that they were read or referred to on the hearing.
It is evident that a mere ordinary indorsement of filing is not sufficient to identify the papers as having been used upon the hearing of the motion. They may [432]*432have been deposited with the clerk for other and quite different purposes.”

In Pieper v. Centinela L. Co., 56 Cal. 173, it was held that papers used upon a motion in the court below, and certified by the judge as having been so used, were-properly authenticated.

In Walsh v. Hutchins, 60 Cal. 228, papers appeared in the transcript as printed, purporting to be an affidavit of defendant, and a counter-affidavit of the plaintiff; hut not embodied in a bill of exceptions, and not certified or identified by the judge who heard the motion as having been used on such motion; and although certified by the clerk as true and correct copies of the papers used on the hearing of the motion, this court held "that it is not for the clerk to determine what papers or evidence the court acted upon,” and discarded the affidavits.

In Nash v. Harris, 57 Cal. 242, this court said: “We cannot indulge in presumptions of papers which were used in the court below on the hearing of a motion. To be considered, they must be made a part of the record of the case by a bill of exceptions, or be authenticated by the judge who tried the case, in such a way as to leave no doubt, when found in the transcript, that they are the papers which were before him when he acted, and upon which he decided. Unauthenticated papers in a transcript, in which there is no bill of exceptions, constitute no part of a record which can be considered upon appeal.”

Tested by the rules thus established by this court for the verification of its record, the affidavits, copies of which are contained in the transcript, but not in any way authenticated or identified as having been used on the motion for a new trial, constitute no part of the record which can be considered on this appeal.

If it be urged that the court below, in its order overruling the motion, referred to_the affidavits of A, B, and [433]*433C, that there is found in the record affidavits of A, B, and C, and therefore as to such affidavits the identification is sufficient, the response must be non constat that the affidavits found in the transcript are those referred to in the order. The court or judge, not having designated those in the transcript as having been used on the motion, to presume from the evidence afforded that they were in fact used on the motion, would lead to a loose system under which abuses would be most certain to occur.

The practice under which the judge who heard a motion certifies to a bill of exceptions or statement containing the papers used at the hearing, or identifies the •papers considered on the hearing in such manner as to leave no doubt of the fact of their having been so used, is simple and efficacious, and cannot with safety be departed from.

We are therefore of opinion that none of the affidavits set out in the transcript as a foundation, or in support of the motion for new trial, can be considered on this appeal.

This view disposes of so much of the motion for a new trial as is based upon accident and surprise, and newly discovered evidence.

We say disposes of that branch of the motion for the reason that the record, aside from the affidavits, affords no sufficient showing to warrant a new trial on such grounds.

Defendant’s right to a trial by jury.

' The action as hereinbefore stated is ejectment.

Defendants filed a cross-complaint, in which they show in substance that defendant, H. A. Benson, in 1881, was seised in fee of the demanded premises, then worth fifty thousand dollars, and certain personal property worth six thousand dollars; that he was sixty-three years of age, and in consequence of sickness and trouble had become weak, debilitated, and deranged, all of which facts being well known to J. C. Beatty, C. F. Jones, and J. C. [434]*434Fisk, who, with a view and intent to defraud him, wrongfully combined and conspired to mislead and cheat him, induced him to sell and convey his property to Jones, and to receive in payment therefor certain Texas land warrants, represented to be of great value, though in fact of trifling value.

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Bluebook (online)
12 P. 454, 71 Cal. 428, 1886 Cal. LEXIS 606, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fish-v-benson-cal-1886.