Lancel v. Postlethwaite

156 P. 486, 172 Cal. 326, 1916 Cal. LEXIS 534
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 16, 1916
DocketS. F. No. 7725. In Bank.
StatusPublished
Cited by34 cases

This text of 156 P. 486 (Lancel v. Postlethwaite) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lancel v. Postlethwaite, 156 P. 486, 172 Cal. 326, 1916 Cal. LEXIS 534 (Cal. 1916).

Opinion

ANGELLOTTI, C. J.

This is a motion to dismiss an appeal taken by plaintiff from a judgment of the superior court, on the ground that the same was not taken within the time allowed by law. As stated in Williams v. Long, 130 Cal. 58, [80 Am. St. Rep. 68, 62 Pac. 264], statutes limiting the time of appeal are jurisdictional and mandatory, and in the absence of an express authorization in the statute itself, a court has no power to extend the time for taking an appeal, or to relieve an appellant from the effect of misfortune, accident, surprise or mistake. If the appeal was not taken within the time allowed by law, we have no power to entertain it.

The material facts may be very briefly stated. The judgment was rendered September 1, 1915, and entered September 2, 1915. Written notice of entry of such judgment was served on plaintiff’s attorney and filed in the office of the clerk of the superior court on September 4, 1915. Notice of intention to move for a new trial was served and filed on September 13, 1915. No order purporting to dispose of said motion for a *328 new trial was made until December 9, 1915, on which day an order purporting to deny the same was made and entered. The notice of appeal was not filed until January 5, 1916. December 4, 1915, was a Saturday.

Section 939 of the Code of Civil Procedure, provides: “An appeal may be taken from any judgment or order of a superior court from which an appeal lies under any provision of this code, or of any other code, or under any other statute, within sixty days from the entry of said judgment or order. ... If proceedings on motion for a new trial are pending, the time for appeal from the judgment shall not expire until thirty days after entry in the trial court of the order determining such motion for a new trial, or other termination in the trial court of the proceedings upon such motion. ’ ’ Other sections of the same code provide for the making of a-motion for a, new trial on various specified grounds, and section 660 provides, among other things, as follows: ‘ ‘ The power of the court to pass on motion for new trial shall expire within three ' months after the verdict of the jury or service on the moving party of notice of the decision of the court. If such motion is not determined within said three months, the effect shall be a denial of the motion without further order of the court. ’ ’

The time within which an appeal may be taken from a judgment was extended, as provided in section 939 as amended in the year 1915 [Stats. 1915, p. 205] (we have quoted the section as so amended), to enable a party to have reviewed on such appeal the failure or refusal of the trial court to grant his motion for a new trial, amendments of our laws in other respects made at the same time having the effect of abolishing the right of appeal from an order denying a new trial which theretofore existed. The portion of section 660 that we have quoted, added by amendment at the- same time, was designed to secure a speedy determination of a motion for a "new trial, and thus to obviate one of the many delays preceding the review by am appellate court of the proceedings of the trial court. The effect of this and the other amendments relative to motions for new trial and their disposition by the superior court is, so far as any question here involved is concerned, simply this: The trial court should determine a motion for a new trial regularly made, “at the earliest possible moment,” and it is expressly made its duty to do so. It has the power, to grant a new trial at any time “within three months after *329 t'he verdict of the jury or service on the moving party of notice of the decision of the court, ’ ’ and also power to formally deny such motion within said time. Its failure to determine the motion at all within said time is a denial of the motion. In other words, a trial court is empowered to grant a new trial, upon a motion duly made to that end, at any time within three months after the verdict of the jury ór service on the moving party of notice of the decision of the court, but not thereafter; and its failure to determine within such time any such motion regularly made is a denial of such motion and a “termination in the trial court” within the meaning of section 939 of the proceedings on such motion.

If the provision of section 660 which we have quoted be effective, Saturday, December 4, 1915, was the last day on which the trial court could make any order determining the motion for a new trial, and the expiration of that day without any order being made was a “termination in the trial court of the proceedings upon said motion” within the meaning of section 939, provided that the fact that said fourth day of December was a Saturday makes no difference, a question we shall refer to later. It would follow that Monday, January 3, 1916, was the last day allowed by law within which to take an appeal from the judgment and that the attempted appeal taken on January 5, 1916, was ineffectual for any purpose.

It is claimed that the provision is in violation of our constitution. The theory appears to be that it is an attempted abridgment by the legislature of power granted to the superior court by the constitution. We are unable to perceive any good foundation for this claim. The matter of motions for a new trial appears to us to be one entirely within the control of the legislature, there being nothing whatever in the constitution pertaining thereto. It has been said that the right to move for a new trial is statutory and must be pursued in the manner pointed out by the statute. (California Imp. Co. v. Baroteau, 116 Cal. 136, [47 Pac. 1018]; Burton v. Todd, 68 Cal. 485, 489, [9 Pac. 663].) Our statutes while conferring such right have always limited the grounds upon which such a motion can be made. It cannot be doubted that the legislature could still further limit such grounds at will, or even altogether abolish the right to make such a motion on any ground. This being so, it is difficult to conceive of any valid objec *330 tion, based on constitutional grounds, to a provision having the effect simply of prohibiting a trial court from granting any such motion after the expiration of a specified time, and making its failure to act within that time tantamount to a denial of the motion. The limitation of the power of the trial court, if we call it such, is a limitation made by the very body providing that such a motion may be made at all, a body whose power in relation thereto is unlimited, except in so far as it is limited by the constitution. The contention of counsel appears to be that there is some invasion of the constitutional jurisdiction of the superior court by statutes which, while authorizing a motion for a new trial, prohibit the trial court from determining the same after the expiration of a specified time; that the power to heap such a motion at all being given, the power to determine the same cannot be so limited or abridged. We can see no force in this contention.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
156 P. 486, 172 Cal. 326, 1916 Cal. LEXIS 534, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lancel-v-postlethwaite-cal-1916.