McFarland v. Hueners

190 P. 584, 96 Or. 579, 1920 Ore. LEXIS 194
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedJune 22, 1920
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 190 P. 584 (McFarland v. Hueners) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McFarland v. Hueners, 190 P. 584, 96 Or. 579, 1920 Ore. LEXIS 194 (Or. 1920).

Opinion

BENNETT, J.

The first question to he considered is the motion to dismiss the appeal. The notice of appeal is as follows:

“In the Circuit Court of the State of Oregon for Jackson County.
“H. M. McFarland, Plaintiff, v. John H. Hueners et al., Defendant.
“To the Above-named Plaintiff, H. M. McFarland, and to A. E. Reames and M. Purdin, His Attorneys ':
“You and each of you will take notice that the above-named defendant, John H. Hueners, hereby appeals to the Supreme Court of the State of Oregon from the order and judgment made and entered in the above-entitled court and cause on the 20th day of October, 1917, in favor of the • plaintiff, H. M. McFarland, and against the defendant John H. Hueners, and from the whole thereof, and particularly from the order of the court directing the jury in said cause to return a verdict in favor of the plaintiff, as prayed for in his complaint, and also' from the order of the court in refusing to grant defendant’s motion for a nonsuit at the conclusion of plaintiff’s case, and from the action of this court denying defts. request to file an amended answer.
“Dated at Medford, Oregon, this 6th day of December, 1917.
“W. E. Crews, “Attorney for Defendant.
“Due service of the above Notice of Appeal is hereby atjmitted this 6th day of Dec., 1917.
“A. E. Reames, by A. B.' Hinck,
“Attorney for Plaintiff.”

As a matter of fact the. judgment appears from the transcript to have been formally entered in court on the twenty-fifth day of October, instead of on the twentieth day of October, as described in the notice of appeal.

[584]*584It is claimed by respondent that on account of this discrepancy in the date, and because it does not otherwise more fully describe the judgment, and does not specifically name the other defendant, Mrs. Hueners, in the title, that it was not sufficient to give this court jurisdiction of the appeal. The cases of Neppach v. Jordan, 13 Or. 246 (10 Pac. 341); Crawford v. Wist, 26 Or. 596 (39 Pac. 218); Hamilton v. Butler, 33 Or. 370 (54 Pac. 200); and Keady v. United Ry. Co., 57 Or. 325 (100 Pac. 658, 108 Pac. 197), are cited to sustain that contention. Judged by the rule announced in some of these earlier cases, the notice of appeal in this case might not be sufficient; but we think the later cases in this court, under the later provisions of the statute, are more liberal. An appeal may now be taken by oral notice in open court, and, if not so taken, it may be by written notice, but the statute says:

“It shall be sufficient if it contains the title of the cause, the names of the parties, and notifies the adverse party, or his attorney that an appeal is taken to the Supreme Court # * from the judgment, order, or decree, or some specified part thereof”; Section 550, L. O. L.

In Raiha v. Coos Bay Coal & Fuel Co., 77 Or. 275 (143 Pac. 892), Mr. Justice Moore, delivering the opinion of the court, said:

“Under the practice formerly prevailing in this court, a notice of appeal as indefinite as the one under consideration would probably be regarded as insufficient [citing cases relied iipon by respondent herein]. The later decisions, however, are to the effect that if, from an inspection of the notice of appeal it can be determined by fair construction or reasonable intendment, and without resort to evidence aliunde the transcript, that the appeal is taken from the judgment or decree in a particular case, it [585]*585will be sufficient to confer jurisdiction of the cause. * * An oral notice of appeal, given when the judgment or decree is rendered, is now' sufficient to secure a transfer of the cause. * * As consonant with this late enactment, the procedure that heretofore obtained, with respect to the manner of inaugurating an appeal, has been so modified as to avoid all technicalities, and a written notice is now held to be sufficient if it complies with the requirements of the statute hereinbefore quoted, and, if from an inspection thereof the adverse party could not have been misled as to the order, judgment or decree undertaken to be reviewed.”

1. We think this a true rule, and that great liberality should be indulged in, in judging the sufficiency of the notice of appeal.

In Robinson v. Phegley, 93 Or. 299, 303 (177 Pac. 942), it is said:

“This court has always been adverse to dismissing appeals on account of mere technical defects in the notice, where it has been evident that no one could be misled by a slight defect or omission.”

2. It is now well settled that the mere discrepancy in the date of a judgment, as recited in the notice of appeal, is not fatal, where the judgment is otherwise sufficiently identified by the transcript, to inform the adverse party fairly, as to the judgment really appealed from: Moorhouse v. Donica, 13 Or. 435 (11 Pac. 71); Salem Traction Co. v. Anson, 41 Or. 562 (67 Pac. 1015, 69 Pac. 675).

3. The only question, therefore, is as to whether or not it appears from the notice of appeal and the transcript, including the bill of exceptions and undertaking, that the judgment brought up in the transcript is really the one appealed from in the notice of appeal, and that the respondent was fairly notified thereof by such notice.

[586]*586It is certified by the judge of the court below, and appears from the bill of exceptions, that while the judgment in this case was not formally entered until the 25th, the trial was had and the verdict actually directed on the twentieth day of October — the day stated as the date of the judgment in the notice of appeal.

Section 201 of the Code (L. O. L.) provides:

“When judgment is given in any of the cases mentioned in Sections 199 and 200, it shall be entered within the day it is given. When a trial has been had before the court without a jury, judgment shall be entered by the clerk in conformity with the findings within the day the findings are filed. If the trial be by jury, judgment shall be given by the court in conformity with the verdict and so entered by the clerk within the day on which the verdict is returned.”

If the clerk had properly performed his duty the judgment would have been entered on the 20th, the same day the verdict was directed and filed, and the day stated in the notice of appeal. The appellant seems to have assumed that what “ought to have been done was done,” and that the judgment was actually given on the 20th, as it should have been. Through some oversight of the clerk, the formal entry seems to have been postponed until the 25th.

It also appears from the notice of appeal that the ease in which the appeal is taken was one in which there was an instructed verdict in favor of the plaintiff, and it appears from the transcript that such a directed verdict was returned in the case brought up, and which verdict was returned, as we have seen, on the very day stated in the notice of appeal.

4.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
190 P. 584, 96 Or. 579, 1920 Ore. LEXIS 194, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcfarland-v-hueners-or-1920.