Lake v. Bender

18 Nev. 361
CourtNevada Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 15, 1884
DocketNo. 1138
StatusPublished
Cited by59 cases

This text of 18 Nev. 361 (Lake v. Bender) 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
Lake v. Bender, 18 Nev. 361 (Neb. 1884).

Opinions

By the Court,

Leonard, J.:

This is an action for divorce on the ground of cruelty. In her complaint plaintiff alleges that there is a large amount of property belonging to the community, and prays for an equal division thereof between herself and defendant. Defendant denies that any of the property described belongs to the community, and alleges that it is all his individual [368]*368estate. When the cause came on for trial it was agreed by the respective parties, and ordered by the court, that the issues relating to the disposition of the property should be withdrawn from the consideration of the jury, and reserved for future consideration and determination by the court, in case a divorce should be granted. Upon the special findings and the verdict of the jury the divorce prayed for was granted. Subsequently, the court, sitting without a jury, tried the issues relating to the character and disposition of the property, and found that it belonged to the defendant, individually. Thereupon a formal decree was entered, as follows:

“Upon the verdict of the jury heretofore returned in this case and the order of the court made thereon, and in consideration of said verdi.ct and order, it is adjudged and decreed that the marriage relation heretofore existing between the said Jane Lake and M.'C. Lake be, and the same is hereby set aside and annulled, and the said parties be, and they are hereby released therefrom. And upon the findings and decision of the court heretofore made upon the issues joined between the parties concerning the property, * * * it is ordered, adjudged and decreed by the court, that the property, real and persona], described in the complaint, is, and that it be and remain, the separate property of the defendant, M. C. Lake, and that the plaintiff’ take no part thereof or interest therein except as hereafter specifically decreed.”

Then follows an order that the defendant pay plaintiff monthly, so long as she shall remain unmarried, the sum of one hundred and fifty dollars, and fifty dollars for the child, and that said sums be and remain a charge and lien upon certain real property described. In the decree the court reserved jurisdiction to modify the allowance at any time. Defendant did not move for a new trial, or appeal from the judgment or any part thereof. But plaintiff so moved as to the issues respecting the property rights alone. She did not ask for a new trial of the issues touching the alleged cruelty and her right to a divorce. The motion was denied, [369]*369and this appeal is from the order denying- a new trial, and from “that part of the judgment * * * affecting- the questions of alimony aud the property rights of the parties to said action.”

It is first urged, by counsel for respondent, that a new trial is a re-examination of alj the issues of fact raised by the pleadings; that it could not have been granted in this case as to property rights alone ; that a motion to retry a part of the case was a nullity, and consequently that the court did not err in overruling the motion made. The question is squarely presented, then, whether the court below had the power to order a new trial of the issues relating to the character and disposition of the property alone, if material error was shown iu the trial of, aud affecting, that branch of the case only ; or, is it true that all the issues made by the pleadings, if any, must have been retried ? This question is not only exceedingly important in the matter of practice, but it is also of great moment in the case in hand, if, as claimed by appellant, the court erred iu deciding that the property belongs to defendant individually; aud, for the purposes of the present discussion, we must assume that the claim of error is well founded. And, too, the legal presumption is that the issues upon the principal branch of the case, the divorce, were tried and determined according to law.

Defendant is presumed to have known the law; and if it is true, as claimed by him, that a new trial could not be had of one part of the case, then he knew that the court could not grant plaintiff’s motion, and if he wanted a new trial of the other part, he should have applied upon the entire case. Failing to do so, or to appeal, the presumption is that the divorce was properly granted. On the other hand, if the lower court had the power to grant a new trial of a part of the .case, then defendant should have applied also for a new trial of the issues determined against him, and, failing to do so, the presumption is as above stated. It follows, therefore, that we must proceed upon the presumption that the principal issue was tried and [370]*370determined without error, and, as to that issue, that there is no cause or ground for a new trial. If it is true that in this case the district court could not grant a rehearing of the issues touching the property rights without disturbing the decision upon the principal issue, then it is certain that in every instance where a new trial is granted the order must embrace the entire case, however distinct the issues may be, and although it may be admitted as to one cause of action that the trial was free from error or exception. For here we have a case where plaintiff must show herself entitled to a divorce before she can claim any separate property rights, and that she has done already. At auother trial, before she could ask the court to retry the portion of the case wherein error is alleged, she would be obliged to establish a right which is already determined in her favor without any suggestion of error. She would be obliged to take the risk of defeat at another 'trial, as to the principal issue, in order to obtain rights incident to those already established. She would have to do over again what is already well done, and then, if successful, establish such property rights as she might have, instead of commencing at the issue, the trial of which alone is claimed to have been affected by error.

Plaintiff applied for a divorce, and a division of alleged common property. There were separate trials however, of the issues presented by the pleadings, those relating to the divorce, by a jury ; and those touching property rights, by the court. The special findings of the jury, adopted by the court, established plaintiff’s right to a divorce. The verdict of the jury and the order of the court thereon were complete before the trial fixing the property rights, and if error crept in at the last trial, it could not have affected the result of the first. The trial of the issues relating to the divorce was as unaffected by any errors that occurred at the trial had in relation to the property, as it would have been if plaintiff' had filed her bill for divorce, prosecuted it to judgment in her favor, without any showing by either party of the existence of community property, and had [371]*371afterwards brought" an action to recover her share of such property. That she could have pursued such a course we do not doubt. (De Godey v. Godey, 39 Cal. 157.) If she had, and the result of the trials had been the same as in this, she could undoubtedly have applied for a new trial in the case relating’ to the property, without making application also in the other; and yet there would have been justas much reason in that case for a double application, in order that justice might be done, as there is now in requiring her to include in her motion a request for a new trial of the issues relating to the divorce.

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Bluebook (online)
18 Nev. 361, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lake-v-bender-nev-1884.