Linderman v. Nolan

1905 OK 129, 83 P. 796, 16 Okla. 352, 1905 Okla. LEXIS 133
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedSeptember 11, 1905
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 1905 OK 129 (Linderman v. Nolan) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Linderman v. Nolan, 1905 OK 129, 83 P. 796, 16 Okla. 352, 1905 Okla. LEXIS 133 (Okla. 1905).

Opinion

Opinion of the court by

Burford, C. J.:

The plaintiff in error, C. J. Linder-man, was sued in the district court of Noble county by the defendant in error, John T. Nolan, upon three several promissory notes of the aggregate value of $198.79, executed by Linderman to Nolan. The answer alleged partial failure of consideration and also that the notes had been materially altered after their execution and delivery. The cause* was tried to a jury on April 18, 1903, and verdict returned and judgment rendered in favor of the defendant. The court, on motion of the plaintiff, granted a new trial. The defendant excepted to the order granting a new trial, and asked and was granted time to make and serve a case. Before the expiration of the time last granted, he applied for an extension of the time upon the ground that the court stenographer had been unable to transcribe - the notes of the trial. The *354 ■court denied this application, and no case was served or set-died and no appeal was perfected.

The cause was regularly assigned for trial at the succeeding term of court, and was reached on Deecmber 18,1903. When the cause was called for trial, the defendant and his ■counsel were absent from the court room, and the court proceeded in their absence. A jury was empaneled, the plaintiff’s testimony introduced, the jury instructed, and verdict ■returned in favor of the plaintiff for the full amount of the ■principal and interest of the several notes. When the jury ■were retiring to consider of their verdict, the attorney for defendant appeared in court and requested to have the jury recalled, and trial reopened, and that he be permitted to introduce his testimony. This request was by the court denied, .and judgment was afterward rendered upon tbe verdict. The •defendant below brings the case to this court for review.

The first contention is that.the trial court erred in refusing him an extension of time within which to make and •serve his case. We do not deem this question to be of any importance. The only question the plaintiff in error could ' have presented for review had he been enabled to perfect the •case made, was the order of the court granting a new trial. .If any prejudicial error was committed by tliat action of tbe court, it may be reviewed in this case, and all tbe rights of plaintiff in error have been preserved. The case made con-fains all the proceedings bad and evidence introduced on tbe first trial, and the petition in error, specifically alleges, as •one of the assignments of error, that the trial court erred in .-granting the new trial, and with this state of the record the ■plaintiff in error has lost no rights by the failure of the judge to extend the time for making a case. Counsel has failed *355 to make it apparent to this court that the trial court erred in sustaining the motion for new trial. The motion was upon two grounds, one of which was “Because said verdict is contrary to the evidence,” which is equivalent to the statutory ground for new trial, “That the verdict is not sustained, by sufficient evidence.” The alleged alterations of the notes was .a controverted question of fact, and the evidence was conflicting. The verdict of the jury was for the defendant. Unless this met the approval and concurrence of the trial judge, it was his duty to set it aside and order a new trial. Appellate courts will, in the absence of an affirmative showing that the trial court was wrong, presume that it acted correctly. Where the evidence is conflicting upon a material question, and the trial court sets aside the verdict of the jury, this court will not interfere. The rule in such cases is the reverse in the trial court to what it is in the appellate court. The trial court should set aside the verdict of a jury unless it is satisfied that substantia] justice has been done. The appellate court should not set aside a verdict of a jury unless it is manifest that injustice has been done. Nothing appearing to show that the trial court commited any error in setting aside the first verdict, the plaintiff in error has lost no rights by his failure to appeal from that order.

Mr. Justice Yaientine, of the Kansas supreme court, in the ease of the City of Sedan v. Church, 29 Kan. 190, in discussing the rights of parties under the statutes which we afterwards adopted and which permits an appeal from an order granting a new trial, very appropriately said:

“Trial courts are invested with a very large and extended discretion in the granting of new trials and new trials 'ought to be granted whenever in the opinion of the trial court *356 the party asking for the new trial has not in all probability obtained or received substantial justice, although it might be difficult for the trial court or the parties to state the grounds for such new trial upon paper so plainly that the supremo court could understand them as well as the trial court, and the parties themselves understood them. And generally where the trial court grants a new trial to one party, it would be best for the other party, if he supposes he has a reasonably good case, to rely upon the new trial and the verdict or finding to be obtained at the new trial, in preference to immediately taking the case to the supreme court, for unless the, supreme court can see beyond all reasonable doubt that the trial court has manifestly and materially erred with reference to some pure, simple and unmixed question of law, and that except for such error the ruling of the trial court would not have been made as it was made, and that it ought not to have been so made, the supreme court will not reverse the order of the trial court granting the new trial. * * *. The supreme court will very seldom and very reluctantly reverse a decision or order of the trial court which grants a new trial. A much stronger case for reversal must be made where the new trial is granted than where it is refused."

The next contention is that the trial court erred in taking the case up and. proceeding to trial in the absence of the defendant and his counsel. The plaintiff in error supported his motion for new trial by the affidavit of his counsel, from which it appears that two or three other cases were on the calendar for trial on the day this case was tried, and were ahead of this case in their order, and that the court, without notice to him, skipped two of these cases and called the case at bar, and his contention is that it was an irregularity in the proceedings and abuse of discretion by which he was prevented from having a fair trial. In support of his position he cites section 4204, Stat. 1893; “The trial of an issue of *357 fact and the assessment of damages in any case shall be in the order in which they are placed on the trial docket, unless by the consent of the parties or the order of the court they are continued or placed at the heel of the docket, unless the court in its discretion, shall otherwise direct. The court may in its discretion, hear at any time a motion, and may by rule prescribe the time for hearing motions.” This statute simply prescribes an order of business, and leaves the whole matter subject to the discretion of the court.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1905 OK 129, 83 P. 796, 16 Okla. 352, 1905 Okla. LEXIS 133, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/linderman-v-nolan-okla-1905.