65 P. 976 | Cal. | 1901
The suit is to recover money alleged to be due on a parol contract, the terms of which are set out in *476 the complaint. The defense is a denial of the material allegations of the complaint, and as an affirmative defense, in effect, that, by a subsequent agreement, the contract was satisfied and discharged. The cause was tried by a jury, who returned a verdict for the plaintiff, and judgment was entered accordingly. The appeal is from the judgment.
The preliminary point is made by the respondent's attorneys, that the bill of exceptions was not served and presented for settlement in time, and must therefore be disregarded. Upon the rendition of the verdict, and before the entry of judgment, an order was made by the court granting to the defendant thirty days in addition to the time required by law within which to serve and file bill of exceptions. The judgment was entered September 27, 1899. On the day fixed for the settlement of the bill, plaintiff's counsel objected to the settlement, on the ground that the copy of the bill had not been served on them "within ten days after the entry of judgment." But as the defendant's time had been extended, the objection was obviously untenable, and was rightly overruled.
It is urged, however, that "it does not appear from the bill of exceptions" that it was served on the plaintiff's attorneys within the additional thirty days allowed by the order, and that the order itself was void because made before judgment. But the making of the order in advance of the judgment was entirely unobjectionable, and regular, and with reference to the other objection, it is sufficient that the contrary does not appear. The certificate of the judge carries with it the presumption of regularity. (Sullivan v. Wallace,
The errors complained of refer to rulings of the court in giving or refusing instructions, and in admitting or excluding *477
evidence. Of the latter, one error specified is the ruling of the court in permitting portions of the deposition of one Mecum, a witness of the plaintiff, to be read in evidence, and in refusing to strike out the same. The reading of the deposition was prefaced with the statement of the plaintiff's attorney, that he did not intend to offer the entire deposition but part of it only, to which objection was made and overruled, and exception taken. On the completion of the reading, the defendant's attorney moved to strike out what had been read, on the ground that only part of the deposition had been read, but the court overruled the motion, the defendant excepting. It is set forth in the statement that the defendant did not offer any portion of the deposition, and that no objection was made to his doing so, and portions of the evidence omitted are also inserted. But these matters we deem immaterial. The simple question involved is, whether it is permissible for a party to introduce in evidence selected portions of the deposition of his own witness, omitting the rest, and, clearly, this question must be answered in the negative.(Kilbourne v. Jennings,
It is indeed said in the American and English Encyclopaedia of Law, in a passage cited by respondent's counsel (vol. 9, p. 365), that "the party offering a deposition in evidence is not, as a rule, bound to offer or read the whole of it"; but, with one exception, we find no support for the proposition in the authorities cited. Of these some have apparently no bearing on the proposition (Edgar v. McArn,
The excepted case referred to is that of Bunzel v. Maas,
Objection was made to the instruction given to the jury, that the contract alleged in the complaint did not need to be in writing, to give it validity. The contract sued on was the promise to pay the plaintiff the reasonable value of the summer-fallowing to be done by the Deveneys. This might be, and in fact was, done within the year. (Civ. Code. sec. 1624, subd. 1.) The agreement of the plaintiff with the Deveneys to furnish them the money needed for this purpose, and in farming the land leased, — which was, in part, the consideration of the defendant's performance, — was in fact performed, and it is immaterial whether or not it should have been in writing. *479
The other points made by the appellant relate to the evidence, and may not be presented on a new trial. It will therefore serve no useful purpose to determine them.
I advise that the judgment be reversed.
Gray, C., and Haynes, C., concurred.
For the reasons given in the foregoing opinion the judgment is reversed. McFarland, J., Temple, J., Henshaw, J.
Hearing in Bank denied.