391 P.2d 31 | Nev. | 1964
OPINION
By the Court,
For a full discussion of the facts of this case, see our opinion in Finnell v. Bromberg, 79 Nev. 211, 381 P.2d 221. In the former case we considered an appeal from the trial court’s judgment awarding damages to Bromberg for Mrs. Finnell’s breach of her option contract for the sale to Bromberg of corporate stock at the price
We rejected the first six of these seven contentions. Bromberg attempted to support the judgment as against the seventh contention on the ground that the record showed a market value of at least $2.00 per share from May 20 through May 25, 1959, and that as he had accepted the option on May 20, it was presumably the thought of the trial court that five days constituted a reasonable time for delivery of the stock, so that May 25 was the date on which the breach had occurred. We held that the judgment for the amount of damage could not be supported on this theory, and that the only real basis for fixing the damages would be the value of the stock on June 2, 1959, the date when Finnell repudiated her contract. No market value as of this date appeared in the record.
We concluded our opinion with these words: “We consider that the judgment must be affirmed in all respects, except the fixing of the amount of damage and that the case must be remanded for a limited new trial on this issue. It is so ordered.” It should be noted
When considering the case on the mandate of our remand the learned district judge took into consideration three motions that had been submitted to him, namely, Finnell’s “Motion to extend time for discovery procedure,” Bromberg’s “Motion to take Turnbull’s deposition in Reno rather than Los Angeles,” and Finnell’s “Motion to release and exonerate the bondsmen on the Supersedeas Bond [filed to stay execution of the judgment].” To this end he filed an 18-page opinion and order, in the beginning of which he recited: “Judge Barrett, the Supreme Court, Counsel for Plaintiff and Counsel for Defendant, all throughout the former proceedings concurred that the measure of damages in a case of this kind is the difference between the option contract price and the market value on the day of the’ exercise of the option.”
“If this Court MUST accept the bare face market value (without question) as it appeared on some Board somewhere in California
“The query now, is whether this Court should go behind the market value in view of the position urged in Busey’s Affidavit which was not presented to the Trial Court or Supreme Court when taken in conjunction with the law cited by both counsel in their respective briefs * *
The trial judge then concluded that it had “the authority to inquire into the corporate affairs and stock market activity for the purpose of ascertaining true stock value.” To this end “the entire file was reviewed by this Court, in the light of the position now urged, and which as stated, was not directly presented to the trial judge nor Supreme Court, and therefore, this Court assumes not considered by them.”
The trial judge then devoted some ten pages to a review of the testimony as given in Mr. Busey’s affidavit and other evidence. Toward the end of his opinion the trial judge states: “Learned and highly respected and capable counsel for the defendant must accept the responsibility for not having presented the position on damages now stressed to Judge Barrett or the Supreme Court. This Court is satisfied that neither Judge Barrett nor the Supreme Court viewed the evidence on damages in the light that it was viewed by this Court simply because it was not presented to them. The Court understands that all efforts of both counsel (in briefs and argument to the trial and the Supreme Court) was primarily concentrated and directed to the exercise of the option question and that actually the measure of damages was conceded by both counsel and the Courts to be market value without any question.”
The learned trial judge then concludes that “ [predicated upon the foregoing,” he is prepared to grant, should it be made, by Finnell, a motion for summary
In the final three lines of the opinion is found the order from which this appeal is taken — “that Defendant’s Motion to Release and Exonerate the Bondsmen on the Supersedeas Bond filed herein on October 11, 1962, be, and the same is hereby granted.”
Despite the limitation of the appeal to this single order, the record presents to us an entire package of orders that we cannot ignore. The lower court frankly recognized that the matters and issues considered by it had never been presented at the original trial or the appeal from the judgment resulting from that trial. No new trial had been granted or sought on the ground of newly discovered evidence which Finnell could not with reasonable diligence have discovered and produced at the trial. NRCP 59(a). The court below also frankly admitted that this court’s mandate on remand limited the lower court’s new trial to the issue of the market value of the stock on June 2, 1959. The trial court accepted (under the unanswered request for admissions) the fact that the market value of such stock as shown by sales on the Pacific Coast Stock Exchange on June 2, 1959, was $1.70 a share. Yet, apparently in a conscientious desire to render a just judgment, it rejected our mandate limiting its power and, without authority so to do, entered into a new trial of various aspects of the case, besides new and additional issues. The same order, in the same package, exonerated the bondsmen on the supersedeas staying execution of the first judgment. It is not reasonably possible to separate the order releasing the sureties on the supersedeas bond from the package of orders
As noted supra, the trial court was willing to assume, from Finnell’s failure to answer the request for admissions, that the request was admitted and that this placed the market value of the stock on June 2, 1959, at $1.70 a share. However, the record shows that at the time of the trial court’s opinion, decision, and judgment the time within which Finnell might answer the request for admissions had not expired.
It should be a simple matter to ascertain whether the stock of Bamhart-Morrow Consolidated was quoted on the Pacific Coast Stock Exchange on June 2, 1959, and what sales, if any, and at what price, were made on such exchange on said date.
All orders of the court below contained in the opinion and decision dated August 9, 1963, and the minute orders entered thereon on the same date are hereby reversed, the sureties on the supersedeas bond remaining answerable thereon (Franklinville Realty Co. v. Arnold Construction Co. (CCA 5th Cir. 1943), 132 F.2d 828; Rector v. Massachusetts Bonding & Ins. Co. (CA DC 1951), 89 U.S.App.D.C. 83, 191 F.2d 329; 7 Moore, Federal Practice 3180 et seq. (2d Ed.), and the case is again remanded for a new trial, limited to the question of
As noted aboye, this is not accurate as reciting tbis court’s view. The date of the repudiation of the option rather than the date of the exercise of the option was the proper date.
The trading was on the Pacific Coast Stock Exchange.
See our comment on this point in the third from the last paragraph of this opinion.
The request for admissions did not designate any period or time within which admissions were required to he made. The language of the rule is : “Bach of the matters of which an admission is requested shall be deemed admitted unless, within a period designated in the request * * * the party to whom the request is directed serves upon the party requesting the admission either (1) a sworn statement denying specifically the matters of which an admission is requested or setting forth in detail the reasons why he cannot truthfully admit or deny those matters or (2) written objections * * (Emphasis supplied.)