Markart v. Zeimer

239 P. 856, 74 Cal. App. 152, 1925 Cal. App. LEXIS 198
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedAugust 20, 1925
DocketDocket No. 2938.
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 239 P. 856 (Markart v. Zeimer) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Markart v. Zeimer, 239 P. 856, 74 Cal. App. 152, 1925 Cal. App. LEXIS 198 (Cal. Ct. App. 1925).

Opinion

HART, J.

Motion to dismiss appeal from a certain order made by the court below.

The plaintiff sued the defendants, who are physicians and surgeons, for damages for injuries alleged to have been *154 directly ■ produced by their negligence while they were engaged in the performance of a surgical operation upon his person. The cause was tried by a jury, and verdict and judgment in favor of the plaintiff followed. In due time defendants took an appeal from said judgment, and subsequently said appeal was heard and considered by this court, with the result that the judgment was reversed and the cause remanded to the court below for a new trial. (Markart v. Zeimer and Heppner, 67 Cal. App. 363 [227 Pac. 683].) The remittitur therein, having been, in due legal time, transmitted by the clerk of this court to the clerk of the court below, was duly filed in the office of the county clerk of the county of San Joaquin, on the nineteenth day of July, 1924. Thereafter, and on the sixteenth day of August, 1924, the defendants caused to be filed in the office of the clerk of the court below a memorandum of their costs and disbursements on appeal in said action; that, on said sixteenth day of August, 1924, notice of the filing of said memorandum or bill of costs and disbursements was served on the counsel for the plaintiff, in the city and county of San Francisco and on the said sixteenth day of August said counsel for plaintiff, in writing, accepted service of said notice.

On the twenty-ninth day of August, 1924, the counsel for the plaintiff served notice on defendants or their counsel, to the effect that, on Monday, the eighth day of September, 1924, at 1:30 P. M. of said day, they would move the court below “for an order striking out and from the files of this court defendants’ memorandum of costs on appeal on file herein,” on several different specified grounds. This notice of said motion was answed by the defendants by denials and certain affirmative allegations, and a prayer for a settlement of defendants’ bill of costs as filed on the date above stated. As above stated, the motion was denied. The ground of the motion to dismiss this appeal is that the order from which the appeal purports to have been taken is not one of the special orders made after final judgment from which section 963 of the Code of Civil Procedure provides that an appeal will lie, inasmuch as (so the contention is) a judgment of an appellate court affirming, reversing or modifying a judgment is not a final judgment within the meaning of said section, which section, among other things, provides *155 that an appeal may be taken from any special order made after final judgment.

Section 1027 of the Code of Civil Procedure provides that the prevailing party on appeal is entitled to his costs excepting when the judgment is modified. (See, also, rule XXIII, supreme and appellate courts.) In this case, as seen, the judgment of the appellate court involved a straight reversal—that is to say, the judgment appealed from was not modified.

The proceeding in which the order from which the present appeal is taken is founded upon the provisions of section 1034 of the Code of Civil Procedure, which reads as follows: “Whenever costs are awarded to a party by an appellate court, if he claims such costs, he must, within thirty days after the remittitur is filed with the clerk below, deliver to such clerk and serve upon the adverse party a memorandum of his costs, verified as prescribed by the preceding section. The party dissatisfied with the costs claimed may move to have the same taxed in the same manner and within a like time after notice of filing of the bill of costs, as prescribed by the preceding section. After such costs have been taxed, or the time for taxing the same has expired, execution may issue therefor as upon a judgment. ’ ’

It is not contended that the judgment of a court of review affirming, reversing or modifying a judgment on appeal from a judgment of the superior court is not a final judgment. Indeed, no such contention or claim could logically be urged, for, obviously, a judgment by such court is final in the strictest sense, and this is true, of course, whether the judgment appealed from and affirmed, reversed or modified, be a final judgment or only an interlocutory judgment or decree. The contention is, as we have seen, that the judgment of a court of review is not the “final judgment” referred to by section 963 of the Code of Civil Procedure providing that from any special order made after “final judgment” an appeal will lie, and that, therefore, in order that he may have the action of the trial court refusing to strike from the files the defendants’ memorandum of costs on appeal reviewed, the plaintiff must do so by an appeal from some judgment in the case.

It is settled that an order on a motion to retax a cost bill made after the rendition of a final judgment by the *156 superior court is appealable. It was recently so declared by the supreme court, speaking through Mr. Justice Seawell, in Hennessy v. Superior Court etc., 194 Cal. 368 [228 Pac. 862], citing Dooly v. Norton, 41 Cal. 439; Empire Gold Min. Co. v. Bonanza etc. Min. Co., 67 Cal. 406 [7 Pac. 810]; Yorba v. Dobner, 90 Cal. 337 [27 Pac. 185]; Linforth v. San Francisco Gas etc. Co., 9 Cal. App. 434 [99 Pac. 716]; Quitzow v. Perrin, 120 Cal. 255 [52 Pac. 632]; Elledge v. Superior Court, 131 Cal. 279 [63 Pac. 300], It may be suggested that, while it is true that the order from which the appeal here is taken is not, strictly speaking, based on a motion to tax costs, but is founded on a motion to strike the cost bill from the files, yet, in its general purpose and effect, it amounts to the same thing! In fact, the application upon which the order appealed from herein is based has been treated as amounting to the same proceeding as a motion to tax or retax costs. (See Stafford v. Hill, 63 Cal. App. 15 [217 Pac. 766], and Arrow Garage Co. v. Kikugawa, 69 Cal. App. 509 [231 Pac. 571].) The position of the movant herein, however, is based principally on the opinion in the case of In re Kling, 48 Cal. App. 741 [192 Pac. 453]. In that case the order appealed from was founded on an application to retax, strike out and disallow the respondent’s bill for costs on appeal, the proceeding to retax and disallow having evidently been inaugurated under the provisions of section 1034 of the Code of Civil Procedure, supra. It is said in the Kling case:

“To entitle a party to appeal directly from an order of this character, it must, as provided by section 963 of the Code of Civil Procedure, appear that the same was made after final judgment rendered in the case wherein allowance of costs is sought. (Crane v. Forth, 95 Cal. 88 [30 Pac. 193]; Empire Gold Min. Co. v. Bonanza etc. Min. Co., 67 Cal. 406 [7 Pac. 810].) As stated, the judgment of disbarment was, on appeal, reversed for insufficiency of the evidence to justify the findings implied therein.

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Bluebook (online)
239 P. 856, 74 Cal. App. 152, 1925 Cal. App. LEXIS 198, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/markart-v-zeimer-calctapp-1925.