Swift v. Occidental Mining & Petroleum Co.

74 P. 700, 141 Cal. 161, 1903 Cal. LEXIS 489
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 28, 1903
DocketL.A. No. 1037.
StatusPublished
Cited by56 cases

This text of 74 P. 700 (Swift v. Occidental Mining & Petroleum Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Swift v. Occidental Mining & Petroleum Co., 74 P. 700, 141 Cal. 161, 1903 Cal. LEXIS 489 (Cal. 1903).

Opinion

BEATTY, C.J.—

The appeal in this ease is from an order overruling a motion for a new trial. After affirmance of the order in Department, a rehearing was granted, because of the error there committed in holding that the specifications in the statement were insufficient to entitle the appellants to a review of the findings of fact for the purpose of determining whether they were sustained by the evidence.

The first part of the Department opinion, however, containing a statement of the case and disposing of certain contentions of the appellants, to the effect that the cross-complaint of defendant was insufficient to sustain the judgment, and the findings insufficient to sustain the conclusions of the superior court, is approved and readopted as the opinion of the court in Bank, as follows:—

“The complaint alleges the ordinary action in ejectment to recover possession of eighty acres of land leased by plaintiffs to the assignors of defendant Occidental Mining and Petroleum Company for mining purposes. Defendant High was an employee of defendant company, and has no interest in the subject-matter of the action. In the opinion the word ‘defendant’ will have reference to the company. Defendant filed an answer, and also a cross-complaint, both of which were amended by leave of court.
*165 “The amended cross-complaint of defendant alleges: The execution of a lease of the land by plaintiffs, setting forth the document in hcec veri a; the assignment to defendant; performance by defendant and its predecessors; offer to execute a renewal and tender by defendant to plaintiffs. In a second count allegations much the same as in second defense in the answer are set forth, praying that the renewal provided for in the lease be decreed to be specifically performed; or, in other words, that plaintiffs be required to execute a new lease. Plaintiffs, answering the cross-complaint, denied the allegations as to performance and alleged discontinuance of the work for periods specified; alleged, also, the wrongful cutting of timber and the burning of oil for fuel; failure to pay royalties as required by the lease. The pleadings are verified. The court made findings substantially in accordance with the allegations in the amended answer and amended cross-complaint, and entered its decree enforcing specific performance of the covenant for a renewal of the lease as prayed for in the cross-complaint.
“Plaintiffs moved for a new trial upon a statement of the case, which being denied, they appeal from the order. There is no appeal from the judgment. There was no demurrer to the cross-complaint or answer.
“It is urged by appellants that the findings are insufficient to support the judgment, and that the cross-complaint does not state a cause of action, and that the conclusions of law are unsupported by the findings.
“The insufficiency of the complaint cannot be considered on an appeal from an order denying a motion for a new trial, nor on such motion can the question whether the findings sustain the judgment be considered. (Martin v. Matfield, 49 Cal. 42; Brison v. Brison, 90 Cal. 323; Bode v. Lee, 102 Cal. 583; Rauer v. Fay, 128 Cal. 523, and numerous other cases.) Where the conclusions of law are claimed to be erroneous and not consistent with, or not supported by the findings, the moving party may proceed under sections 663 and 663½, Code of Civil Procedure (Shaffer v. Lacy, 121 Cal. 574); and where this course is not pursued there must be an appeal from the judgment, or the sufficiency of the findings to support the judgment cannot be considered. (Patch v. *166 Miller, 125 Cal. 240.) . . . This court is limited in its review of the action of the lower court, on appeal from the order denying a new trial, to the grounds upon which the new trial was asked. (Wheeler v. Bolton, 92 Cal. 159.) Appellants cite Simmons v. Hamilton, 56 Cal. 493, and claim that it was there held that the conclusions of law found by the court and the sufficiency of the pleadings could be considered on motion for a new trial. This case has been referred to on the point but once, so far as I can find (In re Doyle, 73 Cal. 564), and it was there said that ‘a party cannot demand a new trial upon the ground that the court erroneously applied the law to the facts, or drew wrong conclusions of law from the' facts found. The remedy in such case is by appeal. . . . Nothing to the contrary was decided by a majority of this court in Simmons v. Hamilton, 56 Cal. 493.’ If there is anything in the Simmons case contrary to the rules above stated, it must be deeemed to have been long since overruled. We must, therefore, confine our inquiry to alleged errors of law properly specified in the statement and determine whether the evidence is insufficient to justify the findings in so far as it is so specified.”

In addition to the foregoing extract from the Department opinion, it may perhaps be useful to point out a distinction which has not heretofore been stated in direct terms, but is clearly dedueible from our former decisions upon the question of moving for a new trial on the ground that the verdict or other decision “is against law.”

Decisions against law are of two kinds. As to one kind, a new trial is always an effective, and often the only, means of correcting the error. As to the other kind, a new trial would be a vain and useless proceeding. In the first class of cases the motion is properly made, and error in overruling it is reviewable on appeal from the order. In the second class of cases, since a new trial would afford no relief, and since other and effective means of relief are expressly provided in the Code of Civil Procedure (sees. 663 and 663½), the motion for a new trial is necessarily overruled by the trial court and the order affirmed here. An example of the first class is where the trial court has failed to make any finding upon some material issue. The omitted fact being essential to the judg *167 ment, a new trial for the purpose of determining the issue is the appropriate remedy, and the refusal to grant it is reviewable on appeal from the order. (See Knight v. Roche, 56 Cal. 17; Spotts v. Hanley, 85 Cal. 168; Haight v. Tryon, 112 Cal. 6.) An example of the second class is where the findings are full and complete as to all the issues, and fully sustained by the evidence, but the conclusions of law are erroneous or misapplied in framing the judgment. In such a ease it is plain that a new trial—a re-examination in the same court of the issues of fact, or some of them, (Code Civ. Proc., sec. 656)—would accomplish nothing, whereas a motion in pursuance of section 663 to vacate or correct the judgment would secure the appropriate relief in the trial court, or, if relief was denied there, it could be secured by an appeal from the judgment.

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Bluebook (online)
74 P. 700, 141 Cal. 161, 1903 Cal. LEXIS 489, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/swift-v-occidental-mining-petroleum-co-cal-1903.