42 S.C. 132 | S.C. | 1894
.The opinion of the court was delivered by
This case was tried at the October term, 1893, of the Court of Common Pleas for Abbe-ville County, on Tuesday, the 17th of October, and the jury rendered their verdict, in favor of the plaintiff, on Wednesday the 18th of October. Thereupon a motion for a new trial was made on the minutes, and the same was heard during the term by his honor, Judge Wallace, who reserved his decision. The October term of said court expired by its own limitation on Saturday, the 21st of October, and the same was adjourned sine die, on that day, before any decision of the motion for a new trial was rendered; but on the 26th of November, 1893, Judge Wallace filed with the clerk of. the Court of Common Pleas for Abbeville County an order, of which the following is a copy: “This ease was heard by me at the October term of the Court of Common Pleas for Abbeville County, S. C., aud the jury empanelled therein rendered a verdict for the plaintiff. A motion was made before me during the term on the minutes, and so entered, for a new trial, on the ground that the verdict was not supported by the testimony. After careful consideration of the testimony in the case, I am of the opinion that there
Within ten days after notice of the filing' of the order of Judge Wallace, granting a new trial, plaintiff’s counsel gave notice of intention to appeal therefrom, “with consent that, in casé the said order of Judge Wallace be affirmed, judgment absolute may be rendered against the appellant. The exceptions of the plaintiff are as follows: “I. Because the Code of Procedure expressly provides that the motion for a new trial shall be heard and decided at the same term of the court at which the case is tried, and it was eri-or in his honor to file an order granting a new trial in this case more than a month after the final adjournment of the court at which the case was tried. II. Because his honor had no power to make any order in the case after the final adjourment of the court at which it was tried. III. Because his honor did not give a different direction to the clerk, who thereupon entered the judgment herein in accordance with the verdict, and his honor had no power to set aside the verdict and grant a new trial after the judgment had been entered on the said verdict. IV. Because his honor had no power to set aside a judgment entered in accordance with the provisions of the Code of Procedure and the rules of court without a direct, formal, application for that purpose, and could only do it, in that event, at a regular term of the court. V. Because his honor was without jurisdiction to make the order aforesaid, and it is submitted that the same is null and void.”
The only authority (if it can be so called) cited to sustain this construction, is certain language used by the writer of this opinion, in his dissenting opinion in the case of Molair v. Railway Company, 31 S. C., 524, but which, so far as we are informed, has never yet received the approval of the court; for in that case the majority of the court based its opinion, upon this point, upon the ground that the motion for a new trial was submitted to the Circuit Judge at chambers, and, therefore, the motion was not “heard” during the term, as may be seen by reference to page 517. But even granting that the construction placed upon these two sections, in the dissenting opinion just referred to, is the correct construction (and I am free to say that I still think so), yet that will not conclude the
The same principle upon which we rest this decision was recognized and applied in the recent case of Aultman v. Utsey, 35 S. C., 596-7, as well as by the Supreme Court of the United States in Mitchell v. Overman, 103 U. S., 62, in which case Mr. Justice Harlan uses the following language, which, it seems to us, i.s conclusive of the present inquiry: “The adjudged cases are very numerous in which have been considered the circumstances under which courts may properly enter a judgment or a decree as of a date anterior to that on which it was in fact rendered. * * * We content ourselves with saying that the rule established by the general concurrence of the American and English courts is, that where the delay in rendering a judgment or a decree arises from the act of the court — that is, where the delay has been caused, either for its convenience or by the multiplicity or press of business, either the intricacy of
See, too, Tribble v. Poore, 28 S. C., 568.