Granger v. Lewis Bros.

2 Wyo. 228
CourtWyoming Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 15, 1880
StatusPublished

This text of 2 Wyo. 228 (Granger v. Lewis Bros.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wyoming Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Granger v. Lewis Bros., 2 Wyo. 228 (Wyo. 1880).

Opinions

Peck, J.

Lewis Bros., sued Jane Granger in the district court for goods sold and delivered; the answer sets up two defenses, one, the general denial; the other, coverture existing at commencement of the suit and nonjoinder of the husband. The pleadings consist of the petition and answer. The case was tried by a jury and a verdict rendered for the plaintiffs below. Sundry exceptions were taken during the trial by the defendant below; and a proper bill of exceptions was filed, and thus became a part of the record. She reasonably moved for a new trial upon the several grounds, namely: that the verdict was not sustained by sufficient evidence, and was against the law; that the court erred in admitting the deposition of Samuel Lewis, also in admitting evidence against her objection ; in taking [233]*233from the jury a material issue of tlie case ; in instructing the jury to disregard evidence adduced to support the second defense; and in refusing to instruct it according to her requests. The motion was duly heard, denied, and a proper exception taken to the denial; and it, the motion, the denial and the exception thereto are a part of the record. The writ of error having been duly returned, she filed an assignment of errors, re-stating with some difference of particularity those that were alleged in the motion ; the assignment is more specific and amplified, but not more comprehensive and .clear than the motion, and is a part of the record.

Both sides assume that a motion for a new trial by the present plaintiff was necessary to preserve her exceptions ; notwithstanding a difference in the court on the subject, we, to dispose of this case, will treat a motion as necessary for that purpose. If necessary, the motion is of-the basis of the assignment, and its imperfections cannot be cured by filing an assignment here. The learned counsel for the present defendants object that the motion was too general to point the attention of the district court to the prior exceptions ; that the latter were thus lost, and the assignment is valueless. He has cited several cases from Indiana and Nebraska which seem to countenance that proposition. These decisions, however, belong to a vicious practice that acquired growth in this country; is opposed to English rule which is our guide; is utterly adverse to the functions of an appellate court, has no sound principle to rest upon, and no palliation but in the pressure of appellate business— a practice of inventing refinements to smother appeals, to close the door of the courts to the suitor, to worry him by embarrassing and senseless niceties, to treat him as if he was to be heard rather as the recipient of favor, than' the representative of right; instead of aiming to examine his complaint to see if, peradventure, he has been wronged; and to the end that whatever wrong has been committed may be righted. This court may not deviate from the better [234]*234law; it must keep in tlie old. path; it must leave the door of review well open, that in the calm atmosphere of a tribunal of final adjudication, errors which have escaped attention below, may be ascertained and corrected, and the relations of the parties adjusted upon théir rights. I can conceive of no institution in the judicial system more important than the court of last resort; its importance increases with the increase of litigation, and it should be easy of access.

The true rule upon the subject of the learned counsel’s proposition is, that if the motion intelligently refers the court to the prior exceptions, it is the duty of the court to look .back into them. This is the rule at common law upon a motion for a new trial based on the judge’s minutes; and the present is such a motion in its nature and principle; the transcript of the official stenographer, filed and thus a part of the record, is still the judge’s minutes; and this motion is based upon such a transcript. By this rule it will be found that the motion now before us is sufficiently definitive, clearly referring the court to the prior exceptions; also to the objection, that the verdict was not sustained by sufficient evidence — an objection which might be raised by the motion without prior exception.

The first ground of the motion is, that the verdict was rendered without sufficient evidence, and against the law. To have been rendered without sufficient evidence, there must either have been a conflict, and the verdict against the weight of evidence, and by a rule precise, clear and technical ; it was then the duty of the lower court to relieve her of the verdict; or the case must have gone to the jury on evidence insufficient to establish a prima facie case for the plaintiff, and then it was the duty of that court to vacate the verdict, though the defendant had omitted to claim before the jury was sent out, a non-suit, and that was its duty, because notwithstanding this neglect of the defendant, the verdict had no basis, and if any ruling of the court on the trial, either in the course of the evidence, or in instructing [235]*235or refusing to instruct the jury, error was committed, against the defendant below, that error must have served to produce the verdict, and the verdict have been against law; thus each specification of this two-fold ground of the motion, intelligently referred the court to error in the trial, if error existed, entitled the mover to a new trial, and made it the duty of the district court, and mates it our duty, to look back, and see whether there was error; so that this first ground alleged in the motion suffices to secure for the party a thorough examination of the previous' case without further complaint; and the additional specifications in the motion were and are superfluous.

But rejecting the first ground, the subsequent grounds are so specified as to unmistakably connect themselves with the 'prior parts of the case, to which they refer; whether erroneously or not, the district court did admit the deposition of Samuel Lewis and other evidence against the objection of the defendant, and the record unmistakably identifies the evidence and the corresponding exceptions; it did instruct the jury to disregard the evidence adduced in support of the second defense, and withdrew the issue presented by that defense, from the jury; and the second clearly identifies these instructions, and the exception that was taken to them; it did refuse to instruct according to her requests, and the record fully identifies the refusals and the exceptions that were taken to them. This brings us to the merits of the exceptions. We will consider them in their order, as they stand in the record.

The plaintiffs below offered the deposition of one of their firm, Samuel Lewis, which was objected to as “ hearsay, incompetent and.irrelevant,” without specifying a particular part as objectionable, but predicating the objection of the entire deposition. The witness testified only as to a sale as made by this firm, of cigars to the defendant, to the prices, certain credits allowed upon the sale, delivery to and non-payment by her; also to his age, residence, occupation and the composition of his firm. His entire evidence was [236]*236relevant, and the objection for irrelevancy was unsound. ,As to the objection that the deposition was hearsay and incompetent; more or less of it was founded on personal knowledge, for aught that can be.

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Bluebook (online)
2 Wyo. 228, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/granger-v-lewis-bros-wyo-1880.