Public Service Co. of NM v. First Judicial Dist. Court

1959 NMSC 002, 334 P.2d 713, 65 N.M. 185
CourtNew Mexico Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 9, 1959
Docket6415
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 1959 NMSC 002 (Public Service Co. of NM v. First Judicial Dist. Court) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Mexico Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Public Service Co. of NM v. First Judicial Dist. Court, 1959 NMSC 002, 334 P.2d 713, 65 N.M. 185 (N.M. 1959).

Opinion

PER CURIAM.

Upon a consideration of the motion for a rehearing the opinion heretofore filed is withdrawn and the following is substituted:

McGHEE, Justice.

Plaintiff, G. & G. Gardens, Inc., filed a complaint in two counts against the Public Service Company of New Mexico, defendant and petitioner herein, in the District Court of Santa Fe County. A final judgment in favor of the plaintiff was entered on both counts, the first being a money judgment based on a jury verdict and the second being an injunction decree.

The case is here on an alternative writ of mandamus arising out of the action of the district judge in vacating defendant’s appeal from the final judgment and from orders denying motions for a new trial as to the jury verdict and for a modification of the injunction decree. The pertinent facts in chronological order are as follows:

January 15, 1958 — Final judgment entered by district court.

January 24, 1958 — Motion for new trial as to the jury verdict and motion to amend the injunction decree filed, the ninth day subsequent to the entry of final judgment and within the ten day limit after entry of judgment as required by § 21-1-1 (59(b), 59(e) N. M.S.A. 1953.

January 30, 1958 — Trial judge advised ' petitioner that its motions would be denied, the fifteenth day subsequent to the entry of final judgment.

February 18, 1958 — Orders overruling the motions for new trial and to amend the decree entered, the thirty-fourth day subsequent to the entry of final judgment and the twenty-fifth day subsequent to the filing of the motions.

March 17, 1958 — Motion for appeal from both the final judgment and the orders denying the motions filed, the sixty-first day subsequent to the entry of final judgment and the twenty-seventh day subsequent to the entry of order denying the motions.

March 18, 1958 — Order allowing the appeal with supersedeas entered by District Judge J. V. Gallegos, sitting by designation in the absence of District Judge David W. Carmody, who tried the case, the sixty-second day subsequent to the entry of final judgment and the twenty-eighth day subsequent to the entry of orders denying the motions.

March 20, 1958 — Motion to dismiss the appeal on the ground that it was untimely, and in the alternative to dismiss the appeal as to the final judgment, leaving only the motions for appeal.

March 25, 1958 — Motion to dismiss the appeal sustained by District Judge Garnett R. Burks, sitting by designation in the absence of District Judge David W. Carmody, on the ground that the filing of the motions for new trial and to amend the decree did not affect the finality of the judgment nor toll the running of the period within which an appeal could be granted and therefore the order granting the appeal was not filed within the thirty days after entry of final judgment.

— Order also dismissed the appeal from the orders Overruling the motions.

Petitioner now seeks the issuance of a peremptory writ of mandamus directing the district court to vacate the order of Judge Burks setting aside the order of Judge Gallegos granting an appeal and to reinstate that order allowing an appeal to this Court from both the final judgment and the orders overruling the motions for a new trial and to amend the injunction decree.

Petitioner first contends that the timely filing of a motion for new trial suspends the finality of the judgment so that the time for taking an appeal from the judgment does not begin to run until the motion has been decided, and thus, the appeal here, taken- within thirty days after the decision on the motions, was timely.

This contention is without merit. We held in a recent opinion, for reasons there announced, that a successful movant against a judgment entered on a jury verdict was entitled to have the time for taking an appeal tolled, pending a decision on the motion. Scofield v. J. W. Jones Construction Co., 1958, 64 N.M. 319, 328 P.2d 389, 392. In King v. McElroy, 1933, 37 N.M. 238, 21 P.2d 80, a non-jury case, we stated that an unsuccessful movant against a judgment should not be given the benefit of the time which would elapse between the filing of his motion and a ruling thereon in computing the time he had in which to take an appeal. Here, the petitioner was unsuccessful in its attack on the judgment and thus, the appeal from the final judgment, taken on the sixty-first day subsequent to its entry, was not timely under our procedure. For an opinion considering this same issue under a six-month appeal period provision and reaching an opposite result see Trowell v. Diamond Supply Co., 1952, 8 Terry 422, 47 Del. 422, 91 A.2d 797.

The sole issue thus presented is whether one may appeal from an order denying timely motions for a new trial and to amend a final injunction decree though the appeal from the final judgment is not timely. Petitioner contends such orders come within the provisions of Supreme Court Rule 5 (2), § 21-2-1(5) (2) N.M.S.A., 1953, as amended, the material portion of which reads as follows:

«2. * * * Appeals shall also be allowed by the district court, and entertained by the Supreme Court, from all final orders affecting a substantial right made after the entry of final judgment.
* * * * * *
“Application for allowance of appeal under the provisions of this section must be made within thirty [30] days from the entry of the judgment, order, decision, or conviction appealed from.”

If so, the appeal was timely since the motion for appeal from the orders was filed on the twenty-seventh day following the denial of the motions.

We first consider the appealability of the denial of a motion for a new trial.

Although petitioner has referred us to several New Mexico cases construing the statute none of them deal with an appeal from an order denying a motion for new trial. The cases of Jordan v. Jordan, 1923, 29 N.M. 95, 218 P. 1035; Singleton v. Sanabrea, 1930, 35 N.M. 205, 292 P. 6; Kerr v. Southwest Fluorite Co., 1930, 35 N.M. 232, 294 P. 324, and Hoover v. City of Albuquerque, 1952, 56 N.M. 525, 245 P.2d 1038, all involved appeals from orders vacating or setting aside the final judgment, and in this sense the final judgment had been modified by subsequent action of the district court.

King v. McElroy, supra, also is not in point on this question. Although Justice Bickley, 37 N.M. at page 242, 21 P.2d at page 82, apparently regarded the trial court’s ruling in denying a motion to set aside a judgment as within Supreme Court Rule 5(2), no appeal was taken from the order.

In Gutierrez v. Brady, 1941, 45 N.M.

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1959 NMSC 002, 334 P.2d 713, 65 N.M. 185, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/public-service-co-of-nm-v-first-judicial-dist-court-nm-1959.