Gearin v. Portland Ry. Light & Power Co.

124 P. 256, 62 Or. 162, 1912 Ore. LEXIS 126
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedJune 11, 1912
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 124 P. 256 (Gearin v. Portland Ry. Light & Power Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gearin v. Portland Ry. Light & Power Co., 124 P. 256, 62 Or. 162, 1912 Ore. LEXIS 126 (Or. 1912).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Burnett

delivered the opinion of the court.

The chapter on appeals opens with Section 548, L.O.L.:

“A judgment or decree may be reviewed as prescribed in this chapter, and not otherwise. An order áffecting a substantial right, and which in effect determines the action or suit so as to prevent a judgment or decree therein, or a final order affecting a substantial right and made in a proceeding after judgment or decree, or an order setting aside a judgment and granting a new trial, for the purpose of being reviewed, shall be deemed a judgment or decree.”

Section 550, L. O. L., prescribes that “an appeal shall be taken and perfected in the manner prescribed in this section, and not otherwise * *”

After providing for giving oral notice at the time of the rendition of the judgment or afterwards by a writing, [164]*164that within ten days from giving or serving notice of appeal the appellant shall cause an undertaking to be served upon the adverse party, and for filing the same with the clerk, and that within five days after notice the adverse party shall except to the sufficiency of the sureties in the undertaking, or shall be deemed to have waived his right thereto, subdivisions 4 and 5 of that section read thus:

(4) “From the expiration of the time allowed to except to the sureties in the undertaking, or from the justification thereof, if excepted to, the appeal shall be deemed perfected. * *”
(5) “An appeal to the Supreme Court, if not taken at the time of the rendition of the judgment or decree appealed from, shall be taken by serving and filing the notice of appeal within six months from the entry of the judgment, order, or decree appealed from, * * and not otherwise.”

Prior to the act of February 25, 1907, a motion for new trial was filed within one day after the giving of a verdict or other decision sought to be set aside. Section 175, B. & C. Comp. The filing of a motion for new trial within the time prescribed ipso facto delayed the entry of judgment until the motion should be disposed of. Section 201, B. & C. Comp. Under the former practice, therefore, the order of procedure was first the verdict, then the motion for new trial, and after that the judgment. The act of February 25, 1907, changed this, so that now we have the judgment and next a motion for new trial, to be filed within one day after the judgment, or such further time as the court may allow. Section 175, L. O. L.

In the new procedure devised in 1907, the legislative assembly omitted all the former provision about delaying the entry of judgment until the disposition of the motion for new trial. There is nothing in the new statute giving any effect to such a motion as a suspension of the [165]*165judgment or stay of proceedings or extension of the time in which an appeal may be taken; yet the essence of the contention for the plaintiffs (appellants here) is that the statute must be construed as if all such terms were therein expressed. They argue that they had the right to file a motion for new trial; that until that attack upon the judgment is defeated, or successful, they cannot know whether the judgment is to be final or not, because it is possible that the court pronouncing it may set it aside. Having arrived at this point in the discussion, founded on their want of prescience, they further urge that on account of this possibility the judgment entered is not a final order, and there can be none in the case, so long as the motion for new trial is pending. It must be conceded that if no motion for new trial has been filed the decision of the circuit court, entered of record March 8, 1910, to the effect that plaintiffs take nothing by this action, would have been and remained, so far as that court was concerned, the final determination of the rights of the parties in dispute. The law has not given to any litigant the authority to change the quality of that decision by any act of his own. It would be an anomaly if, in the absence of present legislation and the repeal of the former enactment on that subject, a suitor, by a motion which he might file, or not, in his discretion, should possess the power to change or suspend the quality of a decision of a judicial tribunal.

The recorded proceeding of the court, of March 8, 1910, was a judgment. It cannot, in the nature of things, be anything else. In that name alone it is appealable, without reference to other court transactions, enumerated as judgments in Section 548, L. O. L. It is the one act of the court, above all others, from which an appeal can be had; and whenever such a proceeding is undertaken it must be pursued in the manner and at the time prescribed [166]*166by the statute. In plain and mandatory terms, the law-reads that “an appeal to the Supreme Court, if not taken at the time of the rendition of the judgment or decree appealed from, shall be taken by serving and filing the notice of appeal within six months from the entry of the judgment, order, or decree appealed from, * * and not otherwise.” There was but one time when the judgment appealed from was entered, viz., on March 8, 1910, and on that date, and no other, the six months began to run; for the words of the statute must be taken in their ordinary and natural import. The difficulty has arisen from the fact that the work of remodeling the civil procedure stopped, as far as appeals are concerned, with denominating what should be artificially deemed judgments. The remainder of the former scheme of appeals was left intact, and the doctrine of stare decisis, if no other reason were assigned, would prevent us from changing the practice as declared, under the same statute, in many judicial utterances.

The act of February 21, 1911 (Laws of Oregon 1911, p. 195), is in effect a legislative construction in harmony with this view; for the legislature by that statute undertook to validate such appeals as this, but in an unconstitutional manner, as pointed out in McCartney v. Shipherd, 60 Or. 83 (117 Pac. 814), and added the proviso that “nothing herein contained shall be deemed to authorize any appeal to be hereafter taken to the Supreme Court from any judgment of any circuit court granting or denying a motion to set aside the verdict and for a new trial unless such appeal be taken within six months from the date of the original entry- of judgment.” This view, although not conclusive, is of great moment in construing the- earlier statute of 1907. The legislative assembly must have construed appeals of the kind under consideration as unavailing in the first instance, or it would not have [167]*167undertaken to validate them, especially with the proviso quoted.

Counsel suggests a paradoxical situation, which might present itself if an aggrieved party, tired of waiting for a circuit court decision of his motion, should appeal from the judgment, succeeding which the circuit court should sustain the motion and this court affirm the judgment. We are not required to, and do not, decide a question not involved in the record before us; but it is suggested that if, within thirty days after the appeal is perfected, the transcript is filed here, as laid down in Section 554, L. O. L., this court would acquire a jurisdiction which might prevail in case of conflict with that so asserted by the circuit court. The illustration so ably pressed upon our attention might be persuasive, if addressed to a lawmaking body, actuated by a purpose to prolong litigation, but that is not the situation here.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
124 P. 256, 62 Or. 162, 1912 Ore. LEXIS 126, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gearin-v-portland-ry-light-power-co-or-1912.