Kershner v. Trinidad Mill. & Min. Co.

189 P. 658, 26 N.M. 73
CourtNew Mexico Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 20, 1920
DocketNo. 2386
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 189 P. 658 (Kershner v. Trinidad Mill. & Min. Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Mexico Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kershner v. Trinidad Mill. & Min. Co., 189 P. 658, 26 N.M. 73 (N.M. 1920).

Opinions

OPINION .OP THE COURT.

PARKER, C. J.

[1] This is a motion to strike from the files all of the assignments of error of appellant. Assignments 1 to 12 relate to tbe alleged erroneous admission of evidence, of which No. 2 is an example as follows:

"(2) The district court erred in admitting, over the objection of plaintiff, Defendant’s Exhibits A and B, as shown on pages 54 and 55 of transcript.”

Assignments 13 to 33 relate to alleged erroneous findings of fact and conclusions of law, of which Nos. 13, 21, 25, and 27 are examples, as follows:

“(13) The district court erred in making finding No. 4 of its findings of fact, in holding that in the spring of 1913, after the completion of the transfer from McKean et al., P. W. Reed et al., as agent and representative of the Trinidad Milling & Mining Company, re-ran lines and posted notice of location on said property.”

“(21) The district court erred in its finding No. 12.”

“(25) The district court erred in its conclusion of law No. 1, in holding that the acts of the Trinidad Milling & Mining Company constituted substantial compliance with the requirements of law as to location and appropriation of mill sites and that it never forfeited, relinquished, or abandoned same.”

“(27) The district court erred in its conclusion of law No. 3.”

These assignments are attacked by appellee as insufficient upon the following grounds, as appears in the brief of counsel:

(1) “All of the assignments of error are too general, vague, uncertain, incomplete, and indefinite to be entitled to consideration.

“The assignments numbered No. 13 to 33, inclusive, all go to the findings, conclusions, and judgment, and are wholly untenable, because:

(2) “No proper exceptions taken in the lower court;

(3) “No attempt made to point out wherein same are erroneous.

“All the other assignments (1 to 12, inclusive) relate to the admissibility and nonadmissibility of evidence, of which all of them fail:

(4) “To point out wherein the evidence complained of was prejudicial to the appellants;

(5) “To quote, state the substance of or point out the particular evidence complained of;

(6) “To state that the evidence complained of was considered by the court in arriving at its judgment;

(7) “To point out that there is no other substantial evidence outside that complained of, to support the findings, conclusions and judgement.”

This situation presents for consideration the fundamental nature of assignments of error and the function which they subserve in appellate procedure. In view of the obscurity in our decisions on this subject, as well as elsewhere, it is deemed proper to re-examine the whole subject to the end that the position of the court may be made plain and the practice may become settled.

The general nature and function of an assignment of error have been variously defined by text-writers and courts. Thus in 2 Tidd’s Prac. 1168, it is said:

“An assignment of errors is in the nature of a declaration, and is either of errors in fact or errors in law.”

In Elliott’s App. Procedure, § 299, it is said:

“The office of the assignment of errors is to specifically and definitely present for review by the appellate tribunal the rulings of the trial court which the appealing party deems erroneous.”

Judge Eliott further says in section 300 that:

“The assignment of errors is, in effect, the complaint in the appellate tribunal, and hence it is necessary that it should be so framed that issue can be joined upon it. It is the pleading which calls into exercise the appellate power; and without it that power is not invoked. By it the case is brought into the appellate court, and upon it is formed the issue, or issues, on which judgment is given in all cases except those in which a question outside of the record is presented in an appropriate mode. In all cases where a review of previously decided questions is sought, errors must be properly assigned.”

See, also, to the same effect, 3 C. J. “Appeal and Error,” § 1461; 2 R. C. L. “Appeal and Error,” § 134; Wade, New Mexico App. Proc. § 485; Lamy v. Lamy, 4 N. M. (Gild.) 29, 12 Pac. 650; Martin v. Terry, 6 N. M. 491, 30 Pac. 951; In re Murray, 19 N. M. 53, 140 Pac. 1042; Farmers’ Co. v. Rayado & Co., 18 N. M. 1, 133 Pac. 104.

In many jurisdictions the assignment of errors is no longer .required, and resort may be had to the brief on argument to ascertain the cause of complaint in the appellate court. In this jurisdiction, however, an assignment of error is required by statute, and “each error relied upon shall be stated in a separate paragraph.” Chapter 43, § 22, Laws 1917. It is to be observed, in connection with our statute, that nothing is said therein as to the form of the assignment. Nothing further is required than that each error shall be assigned separately. The statute requires no specification of reasons why the action of the court is thought to be erroneous, nor is any required degree of certainty or particularity prescribed. Our statute has always been in practically the same form. If anything more is required in an assignment of error than that it shall fairly point out the error complained of, it must arise out of judicial construction or rule of court.

At the time this case was docketed our rule 12 (133 Pa’c. x), which is also our present rule in this regard, merely followed'the terms of the statute, and in n.o way enlarged the requirements therein prescribed. Unless, therefore, this court by previous decisions has committed itself to greater strictness than the statute would seem to prescribe, the assignments in this case are sufficient.

Our cases naturally arrange themselves into two groups: (1) Those where the assignments are held to be too general and indefinite; (2) those where they have failed to point out reasons why the action of the court was erroneous.

In group No. 1 numerous cases have been decided by the territorial and this court. In Territory v. Yarberry,

2 N .M. 391, 454, the objection which the appellant assigned in his brief was that the judge was required to charge the law of the case — that is to say, comprehensively and fully, not in part only, nor upon a particular theory of guilt — and that he failed in his charge to comply with this duty, so intepreted. It appears from the opinion on page 454 that the objections urged in the court below to the instruction were to “each and every part of said charge, ’ ’ and that the appellant did not except.-to any particular error in law in said charge. The court said:

“Our rules require that he should specify distinctly the several matters in law to which he excepts; otherwise, this court will not consider such general exceptions.”

Upon argument before the court it was contended that the trial judge erred in limiting the jury to a consideration of murder in the first degree.

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Bluebook (online)
189 P. 658, 26 N.M. 73, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kershner-v-trinidad-mill-min-co-nm-1920.