Hahn v. Yackley

436 P.2d 215, 84 Nev. 49, 1968 Nev. LEXIS 306
CourtNevada Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 16, 1968
Docket5268
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 436 P.2d 215 (Hahn v. Yackley) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nevada Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hahn v. Yackley, 436 P.2d 215, 84 Nev. 49, 1968 Nev. LEXIS 306 (Neb. 1968).

Opinions

OPINION

By the Court,

Collins, L:

This appeal is from a final judgment in favor of respondent and from an order denying a new trial. We conclude the trial [51]*51court erred, set aside the judgment, and order a reinstatement of the new trial originally granted by the trial court.

The action below was for personal injuries suffered by Oliver Yackley as the result of an automobile-motorcycle collision in Las Vegas, Nevada, in August 1964, when he was struck by a car driven by Peggy Hahn and owned by C. A. Hahn. The jury returned a verdict against appellants for $50,906.

The court entered judgment on the jury verdict on August 29, 1964. Thereafter, the court granted Hahns a new trial unless Yackley accepted a judgment of $20,000 within 20 days from the date of the order. Yackley took no action on the court’s remittitur order within the time fixed. Instead, Yackley appealed the order of the trial court.

Some time later, but before the appeal had been docketed, the district court, on motion of Yackley, granted leave to rehear Hahn’s new trial motion upon which it had already acted. At that hearing the court set aside its former order of remittitur or alternatively for a new trial, and thereupon denied Hahns’ motion for a new trial. The lower court then granted YacHey’s motion to dismiss his appeal from the order conditionally granting the new trial. The position of the respective parties then being exactly reversed, Hahns filed a notice of appeal from the order refusing to grant a new trial and dismissing the appeal of Yackley. Later, Hahns amended their notice of appeal to include an appeal from the judgment against them as well.

The assignments of error are summarized as follows:

(1) Did the district court have the authority to reconsider its conditional order of remittitur or alternatively granting a new trial when respondent failed to act thereon within the time fixed?

(2) Did the court have authority to dismiss respondent’s appeal?

(3) Was the court in error in failing to grant a nonsuit to appellant C. A. Hahn under the family responsibility doctrine, NRS 41.440?

(4) Was the lower court correct in requiring Peggy Charlene Hahn, appellant, to return to Nevada at her own expense, furnish a court reporter, and otherwise finance part of respondent’s pretrial discovery costs?

Following the trial and the jury’s verdict in favor of Yackley in the amount of $50,906 Hahns moved for a new trial. The grounds for the motion include, among others, that the verdict of the jury was excessive and appeared to have been given under the influence of passion and prejudice. The trial court in deciding the motion ordered as follows: “ * * * that said motion for new trial be and the same shall be granted unless [52]*52plaintiff accept a remittitur reducing the jury verdict previously entered herein, in the sum of $20,000, on or before 20 days from the said 25th day of August, 1966.” Yacldey failed to indicate acceptance of the reduction in the verdict within the time allowed in the order, but instead filed his notice of appeal to this court from that order. The record fails to reveal the reasons for the trial court’s conditional order and remittitur, but the obvious inference is that the damages were excessive. The only other document which sheds any light upon the basis for the court’s ruling is contained in an affidavit of Edwin S. Pomeranz, Esq., attorney for Yackley, which states: “At the time of said hearing, the court did enter said order based upon the misconception that by reducing such judgment to $20,000 the court had assisted in effecting a final settlement of the said case, however subsequently thereto and although plaintiff did at all times formally attempt to settle on said basis and as per such understanding of the court, defendants through counsel have refused, specifying that defendants did not offer to settle for $20,000, contrary to the court’s understanding.” Yackley thereupon sought a rehearing of the motion for new trial. The trial court granted leave to rehear Hahns’ motion for new trial, reversed its previous order, denied appellants’ motion for new trial, and upon motion by respondent through his attorney dismissed Yackley’s previously filed appeal.

It clearly was within the power of the lower court to grant the original conditional order for new trial. Hotel Riviera, Inc. v. Short, 80 Nev. 505, 396 P.2d 855 (1964). The effect of such an order when not accepted under the conditions fixed was discussed in Bonelli v. Jones, 26 Nev. 176, 181, 65 P. 374, 375 (1901), as follows: “[Wjhen considered as a whole, it is clear that the order, in effect, granted a new trial unless the respondent consented to the modification prescribed therein; and, in case of his failure to comply with the requirements of the order, then the right to a new trial became absolute. * * * There was, in effect, no compliance with the terms of the order, and it thereupon became an order absolutely granting a new trial.” Thus the effect of the failure of Yackley to consent to the modification perfected the order granting the new trial unless the trial court had unrestricted power to reconsider its previous order and either vacate it or modify it.

There is a substantial split of authority on the question. The annotation in 61 A.L.R.2d 642, entitled “Power of court to vacate or modify order granting new trial * * * ” states that the general rule is to allow the trial court to reconsider its [53]*53orders made during its present term. It is based upon the theory that during that term the court has an inherent control over its judgment. That rule has been adopted by the federal courts and some state courts.

A contrary position is taken by a group of jurisdictions, of which California is a member. Their position is that once a court had entered its order for a new trial, its jurisdiction is exhausted and thereafter its power to change or modify the order is limited to cases of inadvertence or mistake in the entry thereof. Holtum v. Grief, 78 P. 11 (Cal. 1904). As the court stated in Owen v. Crocker-Huffman Land & Water Co., 177 P. 299 (Cal.App. 1918): “* * * [A] practice by which the trial court, after an order has been regularly and deliberately entered, could after reflection for a day, re-examine or recall the testimony and reach a different conclusion and set aside his order, thus regularly and deliberately made, would introduce a most dangerous rule.” The California court went on to say that the “inadvertence” rule did not apply to a judgment given on deliberate consideration. The court noted that it can be implied that the original motion was considered and was ruled upon by the court as it saw proper. Allowing that considered order to be disturbed later would create confusion.

A review of the record in this case leads us to the conclusion that there was no inadvertence or mistake in the original entry of the trial court’s remittitur order or granting a new trial.

We adopt the California rule and hold that once a trial court has entered its conditional order for a new trial and it is not accepted as ordered, its jurisdiction is exhausted and thereafter it has no power to change or modify the order except for inadvertence or mistake in the entry thereof.

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Hahn v. Yackley
436 P.2d 215 (Nevada Supreme Court, 1968)

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Bluebook (online)
436 P.2d 215, 84 Nev. 49, 1968 Nev. LEXIS 306, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hahn-v-yackley-nev-1968.