27 Mont. 94 | Mont. | 1902
delivered tbe opinion of the court.
In the court below the plaintiff recovered judgment against
On motion of the appellant this court, in Carr, Ryder & Adams Co. v. Glosser el al., 25 Montana Deports, 149, (68 Pac. 1043), struck from the transcript the notice of intention to move for a new trial, the opinion containing the following language: “The notice is not made part of any bill of exceptions or statement of the case on motion for a new trial, nor is it a constituent part of the judgment roll provided for and d&fined in Section 1196 of the Code of Civil Procedure; neither is it, in the absence of a bill of exceptions or statement on motion for a new .trial containing it, one of the papers required by Sections 1176 and 1738 of the Code of Civil Procedure to be furnished by copy to this court. It is therefore not a part of the transcript or record on appeal, and must be stricken out.” Counsel for the respondent say that they “hardly know what the court means by the expression, ‘Nor is it, in the absence of a hill of exceptions or statement on motion for a new trial, one of the papers required by Sections 1176 and 1738 of the Code of Civil Procedure to be furnished by copy to this- court.’ ” They inquire whether the court meant to hold that the. notice of intention need not be made part of the record on appeal when affidavits only are used, but must be made part of such record when a statement or bill is used. Counsel have been misled by reading the opinion as it was before correction. Originally the words “containing it” were inadvertently omitted, and in that form the opinion was unofficially reported; but shortly after-wards the omission was observed, and the words quoted inserted. As corrected by the addition of the two- wiords, we think the language may he thus paraphrased: Sections 1176 and 1738 of the Code of Civil Procedure designate the papers- which shall constitute the record on appeal from orders granting or refusing-new trials; the notice of intention to move for a new trial is not one of the papers so designated, nor is it part of the jiidgment roll; unless such notice be included in a statement on motion for a new trial or in a bill, it is not required to be furnished by a copy to this court, is not part of the record, and, on
The motion for a new trial was made upon a statement of the case which does not contain a copy of the notice- of intention or any reference thereto. As was held in Harrigan v. Lynch, 21 Montana Reports, 36, (52 Pac. 642), and in In re Reilly’s Estate, 26 Montana Reports, 358, (67 Pac. 1121), the giving of such notice may be waived, and the omission from the bill or statement of such notice, when one has been given, may also be waived. In the case at bar the notice of intention is not before us, and the record fails to disclose facts from which an inference of waiver may be drawn; on the contrary, the appellant seasonably objected to the statement on the ground indicated, and its counsel now advances the failure of respondents in the respect mentioned as one of the reasons why the order should be reversed. If the rule of Grinnell v. Davis, 20 Montana Reports, 222 (50 Pac. 556), Harrigan v. Lynch, supra, and In re Reilly’s Estate, supra, be followed, the order granting’ a new trial must be reversed. Counsel for the respondents insist that those cases were decided on the erroneous assumption that Sections 1176 and 1738 of the Code of Civil Procedure of 1895 are substantially the same as Section 438 of the Pirst Division of the Compiled Statutes of 1887, and that the cases were wrongly decided. But counsel suggest no reason in support of their contention that was not carefully considered by this court in the two latter cases cited.’ Sections 1176 and 1738, supra, were adopted from the statutes of California after the supreme court of that state had interpreted them in Pico v. Cohn, 78 California Reports, 384, (20 Pac. 706). While Harrigan v. Lynch and In re Reilly’s Estate, supra, were under advisement, the members of this court examined the transcript in Grinnell v. Danis, supra, and found that the new trial proceedings were instituted after
To illustrate the supposed impossibility of complying with the rule laid down in Grinnell v. Davis, it is argued that, if the notice of intention must be included in a statement on motion for a new trial or in a bill, it cannot be so included, and therefore cannot come before this court, where the motion is made upon affidavits only. To this a sufficient answer is that under the rule in Rumney Land & Cattle Co. v. Detroit & Montana Cattle Co., supra, Beach v. Water Co., supra; and Cornish v. Floyd-Jones, 26 Montana Reports, 153 (66 Pac. 838), the mode of presenting, on appeal to this court, affidavits: used on the hearing in the district court, is by formal bill of exceptions; and that in this bill should be embraced (unless there is a waiver or an estoppel) the notice of intention, to the end that the court may be informed whether such notice states a ground to which the affidavits are responsive. If a new trial is refused, the party intending to appeal should cause its insertion; if a new trial be granted, the moving party should see that it is inserted in the bill proposed by his adversary. When the motion is made upon a bill or statement only, the bill or statement must be settled, certified and filed before the hearing and decision; when made upon affidavits only, the bill is necessarily taken at the time of the decision of the motion, or within such time thereafter as the law allows. True, a new trial order is deemed excepted to, and no bill of exceptions is required (Section 1151, Code of Civil Procedure) ; but the law as declared by the cases to which we have referred requires the affidavits fi> be set out in a bill in order to be part of the record, and Grinnell v. Davis
. We are not persuaded that there are sufficient reasons for this court to change the practice. Let it remain as it is.
The order granting a new, trial is reversed, and the cause remanded.
Reversed and remanded.