Van Leeuwen v. Huffaker

5 P.2d 714, 78 Utah 521, 1931 Utah LEXIS 41
CourtUtah Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 3, 1931
DocketNo. 5021.
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 5 P.2d 714 (Van Leeuwen v. Huffaker) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Utah Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Van Leeuwen v. Huffaker, 5 P.2d 714, 78 Utah 521, 1931 Utah LEXIS 41 (Utah 1931).

Opinions

DILWORTH WOOLLEY, District Judge.

This is an action brought by plaintiff to recover a judgment for a commission alleged to be due a real estate broker. There was a trial before the court and a jury which resulted in a judgment, entered upon a directed verdict, in favor of defendant, from which plaintiff appealed. That judgment was reversed and the cause remanded for a new trial. 74 Utah 441, 280 P. 235. Another trial was had, but before the court sitting without a jury, at the conclusion of which findings of fact and conclusions of law were made and judgment was made and entered thereon in favor of plaintiff. Defendant now appeals from the latter judgment.

*525 The appellant has made twelve assignments of error; but he has said nothing in his brief ór in the oral argument about Nos. 6, 7, 8, 10, and 12, or about the questions raised thereunder, and we therefore regard them as having been abandoned and pass them by without further comment thereon. Kelly v. Moab State Bank et al., 64 Utah 290, 230 P. 566; Berg v. Otis Elevator Co. et al., 64 Utah 518, 231 P. 832.

Assignment No. 1 is to the effect that the court erred in denying defendant’s motion for a jury trial and in making the following order under date of December. 3, 1929:

“The above case is hereby assigned to the Honorable James W. McKinney, Judge, for trial, and defendant’s motion for a trial by jury is hereby denied.”

While assignment No. 2 is that the court erred in the recitals to the findings of fact wherein the court recites “a jury trial having been expressly waived by the respective parties appearing therein,” for the reason that defendant did not waive a jury trial, but demanded a jury trial, and the same was denied.

This court cannot review the action of the trial court with respect to the matter of the motion for a jury trial, if one was made, or consider said assignments upon their merits, because the alleged order upon which these assignments are based and the proceedings had in connection therewith, if there were any, are not authenticated or exhibited to this court in the manner required by the Code. The Code provides for two methods by one or the other of which an order or ruling of the trial court must be preserved and presented if the same is to be reviewed by this court upon an appeal. The one method is to show the same in the judgment roll; and the statute provides just what shall appear in a judgment roll. The other is to incorporate the same in a bill of exceptions. All matters which do not appear in the judgment roll by force of the statute must be shown in the bill of exceptions, if they are to be reviewed by this court. The *526 judgment roll and the bill of exceptions, if there be one, shall constitute the record on appeal to the Supreme Court. Comp. Laws Utah 1917, § 6992. The case is here upon what purports to be a judgment roll of the second trial and a bill of exceptions. The bill of exceptions consists of a transcript of the reporter’s notes of the evidence adduced and the proceedings had at the second trial, which was before Judge James W. McKinney. There is no reference whatever in the bill of exceptions to the matter of the motion for a jury trial; the order or ruling mentioned in assignment No 1, purporting to have been made by Judge Moffat, on December 3, 1929, is not mentioned in the bill. So far as the bill of exceptions discloses, the defendant went to trial before Judge McKinney, sitting without a jury, without objection or protest. So there is nothing in that part of the record to impeach the recital contained in the findings which is referred to in assignment No. 2, or to support assignment No. 1. What appellant has attempted to do, apparently, is to have the alleged ruling and order of December 3, 1929, incorporated in the judgment roll, for we observe among the papers in the judgment roll what purports to be a copy of a minute entry of an order made by Judge Moffat on that date which is in the language set out in assignment No. 1. But the attempt is ineffective because it is not made to appear that Judge Moffat settled and signed an exception, which was filed with the clerk at the time the ruling was made, as contemplated by Comp. Laws Utah 1917, § 6970, so that the same would become a part of the judgment roll under the provisions of Comp. Laws Utah 1917, § 6867, subd. 2, as amended by Laws of Utah 1925, chap. 52, which provides what shall constitute the judgment roll in cases of this kind, and the ruling or order not being shown to be one which is deemed to have been excepted to under section 6966, having been made in the absence of the defendant or his counsel. The order therefore is not shown to be one which should properly be included in the judgment roll and its inclusion therein amounts to nothing, and not being a part of the judgment roll or being shown in the bill of *527 exceptions, and hence not a part of the record on appeal, this court can take no notice of it, nor can it review the action of the trial court with respect thereto. Murphy Wholesale Grocery Co. v. Skaggs et al., 67 Utah 487, 248 P. 127; Mary Jane Stevens Co. v. Foley et al., 67 Utah 578, 248 P. 815; Cornelius v. Mohave Oil Co. et al., 66 Utah 22, 239 P. 475.

To make ourselves perfectly clear with respect to the matter, let it be added that if the defendant had taken an exception to Judge Moffat’s ruling and thereupon had Judge Moffat settle and sign an exception and filed it with the clerk, then the same would have become a part of the judgment roll under the statute and this court could review the matter; or if the order had been made in the absence of the defendant or his counsel, it would also become a part of the judgment roll and would be presented for review in this court. But neither of those requirements appearing, and the order not being one which otherwise becomes a part of the judgment roll by virtue of the statute, the inclusion of a copy of the minute entry of the order among the papers in the judgment roll is a nullity. What the defendant should have done was to have a copy of the minute entry, showing his exception to the ruling, included in the bill of exceptions which was settled by the judge who tried the case, when he failed to have Judge Moffat settle an exception and file it with the clerk at the time the ruling was made.

Assignments 3, 4, and 5 attack certain of the findings of fact. The trial court found that Davis, the broker who is the assignor of the cause of action upon which the action is brought, secured a customer, Waite, who was ready, able, and willing to trade, and who did trade, certain real estate owned by him, to wit, the Cozy Dale Farm, for the real estate described in the listing contract, upon terms acceptable to the defendant; and that Davis, through his efforts, in whole or in part, brought the minds of Huffaker and Waite together in the trade which was made; and that Davis performed all the terms and con *528 ditions of said contract on his part to be kept and performed ; and hence the trial court concluded as a matter of law that Davis was, and the plaintiff as his assignee is, entitled to the claimed commission.

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Bluebook (online)
5 P.2d 714, 78 Utah 521, 1931 Utah LEXIS 41, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/van-leeuwen-v-huffaker-utah-1931.