70 P. 171 | Cal. | 1902
Lead Opinion
The respondent moves to dismiss the appeals herein taken from the judgment and also from the order denying appellants' motion for a new trial.
The ground of the motion to dismiss the appeal taken from the judgment, among others, is, that the notice of appeal was prematurely given, being served and filed on the eighth day of July, 1901, and that the final judgment and decree in said action was entered on the ninth day of July, 1901, and not before that day. The showing in support of the motion establishes the fact very clearly that the judgment in the case was entered July 9, 1901, and not before said date, as *308
claimed on the part of the respondent. Section 939 of the Code of Civil Procedure fixes the time for appeal from the judgment so as to run from the entry thereof; and under this provision it has been repeatedly held that an appeal from a judgment will not lie until after judgment is entered, and if taken before will be dismissed for want of jurisdiction in the appellate court.(Lorenz v. Jacobs,
The main grounds of the motion to dismiss the appeal from the order denying appellants' motion for a new trial are, that the only notice of intention to move for a new trial was served and filed in said action on the ninth day of March, 1901, whereas the final decision was not made or filed in said court until the seventh day of June, 1901; and further, that no undertaking on the appeal from said order was ever filed in said action. The premature service of a notice of intention to move for a new trial, or a failure to serve such notice at all, might be a good reason for denying the motion, but does not deprive this court of jurisdiction to hear the appeal, nor does it constitute a reason for its dismissal upon the ground that the court has not jurisdiction to hear it. Matters occurring prior to the order appealed from cannot be considered on the motion to dismiss an appeal. (Heinlen v. Heilbron,
It has been repeatedly held that on an appeal from both the judgment and an order denying a new trial only one undertaking for three hundred dollars need be filed in order to give this court jurisdiction of both appeals. This is, however, an exception to the general rule requiring a separate undertaking for each appeal, but the practice has been continued so long and has become so well settled that the court has on several occasions expressly declined to disturb the rule. (Chester v.Bakersfield Town Hall Assn.,
The motion to dismiss the appeal taken from the judgment must be granted. The motion to dismiss the appeal from the order refusing a new trial is denied.
Harrison, J., Garoutte, J., McFarland, J., and Henshaw, J., concurred.
Dissenting Opinion
I dissent. Conceding, as I must, that the order dismissing this appeal on the ground that the notice was prematurely filed is sustained by a long and unbroken line of decisions, commencing with McLaughlin v. Doherty,
There never was, in my opinion, any sufficient ground for holding that section 939 of the Code of Civil Procedure prevented an appeal being taken before the entry of judgment. Prior to the adoption of the codes in 1872 it was provided in section 336 of the Practice Act, which corresponds to section 939 of the Code of Civil Procedure, that an appeal from a final judgment in an action or proceeding might be taken within one year after therendition of the judgment. A *310 judgment, that is to say, was appealable as soon as rendered, and ceased to be appealable one year from that date.
There is, however, always some interval, and often a considerable interval, between the judicial act of pronouncing or rendering judgment and the purely ministerial act of recording it by the clerk, upon whom that duty devolves. Owing to the erroneous opinion entertained by some attorneys that a judgment was not rendered in the sense of the statute until it was entered of record, they delayed appealing for more than a year after the rendition of judgments, in the belief that their appeals would be in time if taken within a year after entry. These appeals were dismissed upon the ground that they had not been taken in time.(Gray v. Palmer,
Did the language of the amendment necessarily require, or even reasonably justify, that construction? To my mind it is plain that it did not. The object of the legislature was not to postpone the right of appeal until the clerk of the court should actually transcribe the judgment upon the record, but to extend the right to a full year from such transscription, the date of which it was supposed would be accurately and certainly ascertained and conclusively proved by the record. The object was to enlarge and protect the right, *311 not to restrict it and involve it in doubt and uncertainty. Having regard, therefore, to the occasion and purpose of the amendment, it is clear that the words "within one year after the rendition," etc., meant nothing more than if the law had said "not later than one year after." The word "within" had reference solely to the end of the period prescribed, and not to its beginning. This is a perfectly legitimate sense of the expression, and is the precise sense that has been ascribed to it by the decisions of this court.
Section 209 of the old Practice Act (Code Civ. Proc., sec. 681) provided that the party in whose favor judgment was given might at any time "within five years after the entry thereof issue a writ of execution," etc. Here it will be seen is the identical form of expression used in defining the time within which execution may issue that is used in defining the time within which an appeal may be taken. And how has it been construed? Has it ever been held that an execution was void or the proceedings thereunder ineffective because it was issued before the entry of judgment? On the contrary, it has been expressly held that a sale of real property made under an execution so issued is valid and effective to pass the title. (Los Angeles County Bank v. Raynor,
No better illustration of the inconvenient results of these rulings could be found than the present case. The prevailing party in the court below — the respondent here — neglected for a long time after the filing of the findings and conclusions of the court to prepare a decree in accordance therewith, and the losing party, who desired to appeal, was compelled himself to prepare the decree, which after some further delay was signed by the judge and filed with the clerk for entry on the twenty-ninth day of June. On the first of July a copy of this decree, certified by the clerk to be "on file and of record" in his office, was forwarded to appellants' attorney, who thereupon gave notice of his appeal on the 8th of July. It is now found, and is probably true, that the decree was not actually recorded in the judgment-book until the next day — July 9th. But in order to determine this point the court has been obliged to read a mass of affidavits of the attorneys, of the clerk, his deputy and assistants, and other parties, explanatory in part of apparent inconsistencies in the records themselves. This conflicting evidence has also been the subject of extended argument — oral and written — involving an amount of labor quite as great as the decision of most cases on their merits. The attorney for respondent admits that he knew very soon after the notice of appeal was served that the judgment had not been recorded prior to the notice. He gave generous extensions of time to appellants for the preparation and service of their briefs, and on that plea obtained liberal extensions of time for filing his brief in reply. By these extensions of time he was able to avoid any disclosure of his objection to the sufficiency of the notice of appeal until it was too late to give another, and then he moved to dismiss.
There could not be a case in which the court could more justly reverse an erroneous rule of procedure, and we could not do ourselves and the profession and the cause of justice *314 a more substantial service than to lay down now a rule of practice which for the future would absolve us from the necessity of expending valuable time in the investigation of questions such as are involved in this motion.
Rehearing denied.