Nathan v. Porter

172 P. 170, 36 Cal. App. 356, 1918 Cal. App. LEXIS 458
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedFebruary 21, 1918
DocketCiv. No. 2321.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 172 P. 170 (Nathan v. Porter) 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
Nathan v. Porter, 172 P. 170, 36 Cal. App. 356, 1918 Cal. App. LEXIS 458 (Cal. Ct. App. 1918).

Opinion

*357 LENNON, P. J.

Viewing the appeal as one only from the judgment and conceding the correctness of the contention that we are foreclosed, because of a technical imperfection of the record before us, from considering the sufficiency of the evidence to support the trial court’s findings of fact, nevertheless we are of the opinion that that record, consisting of the judgment-roll and the bill of exceptions prepared and presented in support of the purported appeal from an order denying a new trial, will, when considered as a single record supporting the appeal from the judgment, suffice to warrant and enable a discussion and decision of the correctness of the trial court’s order denying the plaintiff a new trial.

The record shows that the judgment was made and entered on the twenty-seventh day of January, 1914; that notice of appeal therefrom was served and filed on May 1, 1914; that respectively on April 14 and 15, 1914, the plaintiff served and filed his notice of intention to move for a new trial, which specified that such motion would “be made upon a bill of exceptions to be thereafter prepared,” and designated as the grounds of the motion (1) the insufficiency of the evidence to justify the decision, (2) that the decision was against law, and (3) errors of law occurring at the trial; that on November 17, 1915, the court below entered an order denying the plaintiff’s motion for a new trial, and that respectively on December 17 and 18, 1915, the plaintiff gave and filed his notice of appeal from the said order.

Admittedly the amendment to section 963 of the Code of Civil Procedure, which discontinued the right to appeal from an order denying a new trial save in certain excepted cases of which the present ease is not one, was in operation at the time when the order denying a new trial was entered and at the time when the plaintiff purported to appeal therefrom. (Stats. 1915, p. 209, in effect August 8, 1915.) Therefore it must be held that, even though the plaintiff had initiated his motion for a new trial prior to the adoption and operation of the law limiting his right to appeal from the judgment only, the law in effect at the time of the entry of the order denying the motion for a new trial must control, and, as a consequence, the purported appeal therefrom was, in and of itself, of no avail. (Woodruff v. Colyear, 172 Cal. 440, [156 Pac. 475].)

*358 Of course that appeal cannot he considered and, in strictness, should he dismissed, but it does not follow that a review of the merits of the motion for a new 'trial must fall with the attempted appeal from the order denying a new trial. The statute, section 956 of the Code of Civil Procedure, relating to the scope of an appeal from a judgment as ardended contemporaneously with the amendment to the law abolishing the right to an appeal from the order denying a new trial, provides that, upon an appeal from a judgment, this court may, among other things, review “an order or motion for a new trial.” (Stats. 1915, p. 328, in effect August 8, 1915.)

Although the record shows that the bill of exceptions, upon which the motion for a new trial was made and heard, was not filed as engrossed until August 30, 1915, still the record also shows that the bill of exceptions was prepared by counsel for plaintiff in the month of April, 1915, and settled, allowed, and approved by the trial judge on August 7, 1915, just one day in advance of the taking effect of the amendment abolishing appeals from an order denying a new trial.

As we read sections 650 et seq. of the Code of Civil Procedure which were likewise contemporaneously amended (Stats. 1915, p. 207) and which relate to the form and requirements of the record upon which a motion for a new trial may be based, we do not understand that the right to resort to a bill of exceptions in support of a motion for a new trial grounded upon errors of law occurring during the trial has been abrogated. But however that may be, the law at the time the plaintiff gave his notice of intention to move for a new trial gave him the right to rely upon a bill of exceptions to be subsequently prepared in support of the motion and therefore, regardless of his right to appeal from the order denying the motion, the motion itself necessarily must have been heard upon the record prepared and noticed for the hearing.

Apparently the appeal from the judgment and the purported appeal from the order were taken pursuant to the provisions of the old method of appeal and may, for the purposes of this discussion, be considered as having been taken only under that method. Having been taken under that method, doubtless counsel .for plaintiff assumed, as he was justified in doing, that, under rule 2 of the supreme court (119 Pac. ix), his appeal from the judgment, even though taken in advance of the determination of his motion for a new trial, need not *359 be accompanied by a record showing the evidence and the rulings of the trial court until after a hearing and determination of the motion for a new trial, when, if he saw fit, the bill of exceptions used upon the hearing of the motion.would be transmitted to the higher court and there, in conjunction with the judgment-roll, be considered the record in support of the appeal from the judgment.

Manifestly the plaintiff was not required to wait until his motion for a new trial was determined before taking an appeal from the judgment. He might take that appeal separately at any time within the time prescribed by the statute and it will not do to say, as has been suggested, that, the law having deprived him of the right to appeal from the order denying the new trial but giving him thirty days after the denial of the motion to appeal from the judgment (Code Civ. Proc., sec. 939), he should, in order to bring the merits of the motion for a new trial before this court, have filed a second appeal from the. judgment. Having filed, in the first instance, a valid appeal from the judgment, the plaintiff was precluded from taking a second appeal while the first was pending and undetermined. (Hill v. Finnigan, 54 Cal. 311; Brown v. Plummer, 70 Cal. 337, [11 Pac. 631]; Tompkins v. Montgomery, 116 Cal. 121, [47 Pac. 1006].)

While it is true that the law as now written apparently provides no procedure for transmitting to the appellate court the record used as the basis for a motion for a new trial in a case where an appeal from a judgment has been rightfully taken in advance of the hearing and determination of the motion, nevertheless, in the absence of such provision, it would be permissible, for the purpose of permitting the case to be disposed of on its merits rather than upon a technicality, to adopt any suitable procedure which, conformable to the spirit of the code, would achieve the desired result. (Code Civ. Proc., sec. 187.)

Thus, if in the present case the bill of exceptions used upon the hearing of the motion did not appear duly authenticated in the record before us, we would be privileged to bring it here upon a proper showing in response to a suggested diminution of the record. The bill of exceptions, however, duly authenticated by the trial judge, is included in the transcript which, by stipulation of respective counsel, constitutes the record upon appeal from the judgment.

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Bluebook (online)
172 P. 170, 36 Cal. App. 356, 1918 Cal. App. LEXIS 458, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nathan-v-porter-calctapp-1918.