8 Mont. 214 | Mont. | 1888
This is a suit against the defendant for one thousand seven hundred and fifty dollars, the amount of his promissory note in favor of the plaintiff, given to represent the purchase price of the interests of S. J. Barber, A. T. Higgins, and Robert Kircheval in the “Blue Jacket Mine,” in Washington County, Idaho; the note was to have been paid at the First National Bank of St. Paul, Minnesota. On the 2d of December last, the plaintiff having with leave of the court filed an amended complaint, the judge made an order directing the defendant to answer on the 5th of the same month; whereupon the latter reserved a bill of exceptions to the ruling of the court, bat, nevertheless, complied with the order by filing the answer as required. On the same day he filed his motion and affidavit for a continuance, which being overruled, he reserved another bill of exceptions. The defendant offered no evidence upon the trial of the cause, and judgment being rendered against him, he appealed the case to this court.
Two questions are presented for our consideration: First, as to the legality of the order directing the defendant to answer; and, second, the correctness of the order overruling the motion for a continuance. In considering the question of amendments it is well to bear in mind that they are of two kinds — one of substance, and the other of form, which exists in the very nature of things. An illustration of the first class is where some material allegation has been left out of the original complaint, as, for instance, in a suit to recover on a note payable at
This brings us to the consideration of the motion for a continuance, which, under section 290 of the Code of Civil Procedure, is an order or ruling which the law deems excepted to. We find that the transcript before us embraces the amended complaint, the bill of exceptions taken to the order directing the defendant to answer, the answer, the affidavit for the continuance, the minutes of the court, showing the order overruling the motion, and the clerk’s note that defendant excepts, the replication, the verdict, the judgment, and notice of appeal, with undertaking. The judgment roll contains no formal bill of exceptions to the order overruling the motion for continuance; and, unless we are to consider the affidavit as a part of the judgment roll, there is nothing before the court for review on this point. Section 290 of the Code of Civil Procedure declares and specifies that a verdict, and certain decisions, orders, and rulings, are deemed to have been excepted to; and among them is an order for a continuance. It is a literal copy of section 647 of the Code of Civil Procedure of California; but its object or purpose is not very plain, unless we accept the reason given by the compilers of that Code, who stated in their note that these “ orders, decisions, rulings, and verdicts might be rendered or had in the absence of the losing party; and for his protection the exception was reserved by operation of law.” (Code Commissioners’ note, Code Civ. Proc. Cal. § 647.) The mere fact that the law has reserved an exception will not avail a party any more than if he had not excepted, unless the grounds and reasons, with so' much of the evidence as is necessary to explain the point, be embodied in a bill of exceptions, properly settled and signed, as is required by the Code of Civil Procedure, sections 291 and 292. When we come to examine the matters which are deemed excepted to, it will be seen that there are two kinds, those orders, decrees, and rulings which appear upon the face of the pleadings; and the other is of that class where
Bearing these facts in mind, we will proceed to examine the decisions illustrating the distinction stated. In the case of Dodson v. Nevitt, 5 Mont. 520, the plaintiff moved to strike out a counter-claim set forth in the defendant’s answer; and, being sustained on appeal, this court said: “The motion was in effect a demurrer to the counter-claim, for the reason that the same did not state tacts sufficient to constitute a cause of action against the respondent, and, like a demurrer, when overruled or sustained, will be deemed excepted to without a formal bill of exceptions, and the questions presented come properly before the court on appeal from the judgment.” Again, in Power v. Gum, 6 Mont. 5, in reviewing an order denying a motion for a judgment on the pleadings, this court held that it was a matter deemed excepted to without a formal bill of exceptions, because it was a demurrer to a pleading on the ground of insufficiency, “and a motion, in so far as it is an application for an order for judgment in consequence of such defect.” From these cases it appears that when the order, decision, ruling, or other matter, deemed excepted to by law, is apparent upon the face of the pleadings, no formal bill of exceptions is necessary in order to have the ruling reviewed on an appeal based upon the judgment roll. (Granite Mountain Mining Co. v. Weinstein, 7 Mont. 440; Jones v. City of Petaluma, 36 Cal. 230; Smith v. Lawrence, 38 Cal. 28; 99 Am. Dec. 344.) Under section 83, Code of Civil Procedure, demurrers are embraced in the term “pleadings,” as used in the
The other line of decisions to which we referred begins with Noteware v. Sterns, 1 Mont. 314, which was tried on an agreed statement of facts, resulting in a judgment of nonsuit, from which the plaintiff appealed. But the lower court having tried the case on evidence in the form of the agreed statement, which was included in the transcript, the appellate court refused to consider the evidence, because it formed no part of the judgment roll, and could only be brought before that court by having it included in a statement on appeal, or in a formal bill of exceptions, or by having the judge who tried the case certify that the statement was used upon the trial before him. To the same effect is Kleinschmidt v. McAndrews, 4 Mont. 27, which was also an appeal from a judgment of nonsuit, rendered upon evidence, and to which ruling the plaintiff excepted and drew a bill, which was signed by the judge, but did not include in it the evidence upon which the court acted. Although the evidence was found in the transcript, the Supreme Court refused to consider it, because in the language of the opinion, it was “ not expressly made a part of, nor expressly stated in, any bill of exceptions.” Again, in Rooney v. Tong, found in the same volume, on page 597, this court said: “ The motion for a nonsuit was granted, and an exception noted, but no bill of exceptions was filed, and if there had been, it would have presented no question to be ried, unless it contained a statement of the testimony.” While the orders or decisions in the cases just considered were in themselves appealable, they were also of that nature which by section 290, Code of Civil Procedure, are deemed excepted to. The case of Sherman v. Higgins, decided by this court at the January term, and reported in 7 Mont., page 479, is in line with the above cases, and is directly in point on the question under consideration. It was an appeal from the judgment, and among other questions presented for review the correctness of a ruling of the lower court in refusing a continuance. McLeary, J., as the organ of the court, held “ that the affidavit of counsel, on his application for continuance, although inserted in the tran
Judgment affirmed.