68 Neb. 38 | Neb. | 1903
William Dalton sued the Bee Building Company to recover damages for a personal injury. A jury was impaneled to try the issues, and, the plaintiff having submitted his evidence and rested his case, defendant moved the court to direct a verdict in its favor on the ground that there was neither averment nor proof of an actionable wrong. The motion was sustained, but before the peremptory instruction could be given plaintiff asked that the case be dismissed without prejudice, and his request was granted. By this proceeding in error the order of dismissal is brought to this court for review.
Section 430 of the Code of Civil Procedure is as follows: “An action may be dismissed without prejudice to a future action: First — By the plaintiff, before the final submission of the case to the jury, or to the court, where the trial is by the court. Second — By the court, where the plaintiff fails to appear on the trial. Third — By the court, for want of necessary parties. Fourth — By the court, on the application of some of the defendants, where there are others whom the plaintiff fails to prosecute with diligence. Fifth — By the court, for disobedience by the plaintiff of an order concerning the proceedings in the action. In all other cases, upon the trial of the action, the decision must be upon the merits.”
Obviously the principal question to be decided is
“Where a demurrer to the evidence is sustained,” says Mr. Justice Brewer in St. Joseph & D. C. R. Co. v. Dryden, 17 Kan. 278, 280, “the case is ready for judgment. It has been finally submitted to the court, and the plaintiff has no more right to dismiss then than he has after a verdict is returned. The case is decided, and the plaintiff has no right to avoid that decision by a dismissal.” To permit a party to dismiss under such circumstances is, in substance, to grant him a new trial after he has been fairly defeated and to deprive his adversary of the fruits of a fairly won victory. It is contrary to good sense and sound policy to allow a party to take his case from one court to another until fortune favors him with a judge who is willing to accept his view of the law or his construction of the evidence. “Such a mode of proceeding would,” as was said in Conner v. Drake, 1 Ohio St. 166, 170, “be triflifig with the court as well as with the rights of defendants.” One who is defending against a claim which he believes to be unjust ought not to be subjected to the expense of litigation which settles nothing. And since he is not permitted to choose another forum when it is discovered that the court is against him, it is manifestly unfair to give the plaintiff an unlimited freedom of choice. The tax-paying public, too, have rights which it may be presumed the legislature took into account in adopting section 430. It is, of course,
A further contention on behalf of plaintiff is that if the dismissal was not a matter of strict right it was at least a warrantable exercise of a discretionary power vested in the court. The record does not show that the court undertook to exercise a discretionary power or that the situation called for the exercise of such power. The application was evidently made and granted as a deinandable' right. The plaintiff’s only reason for wishing to dismiss was that the court held his evidence to be insufficient. He did not claim then, and he does not claim now, that he failed to produce all the evidence obtainable. There is no suggestion of surprise, mistake or accident; there is no intimation that the case submitted was not as strong as it is ever possible for plaintiff to make it. If the dismissal be regarded as an exercise of judicial discretion, it must have been claimed and allowed on the theory that it was right and proper that plaintiff should have the judgment of another trial court upon his case. Such a theory is, of course, inadmissibla The ground upon which the court actually proceeded is shown with reasonable certainty by
The discretionary power of the district court to set aside a submission and receive further evidence, or to postpone the trial, or even to permit a dismissal of the case, is not doubted; but there is nothing in the present record to indicate that there was any just ground for the exercise of
The decision is reversed and the cause remanded for further proceedings.
Reversed and remanded.