244 P. 932 | Cal. Ct. App. | 1926
A petition for a writ of mandate directing the Superior Court in and for the County of Alameda to hear and determine a motion for a new trial.
It appears that in an action pending in respondent Court issues of fact are raised by the pleadings; that the cause having come on for trial, evidence was adduced by the plaintiff (who is the petitioner here) in support of the allegations of its complaint, and that upon the conclusion of the latter's case a motion by the defendant for a nonsuit, on the ground that plaintiff had failed to prove a sufficient case for the jury, was granted. Thereafter and within the time provided by statute petitioner served and filed a notice of intention to move for a new trial upon the minutes of the Court and the pleadings and papers filed in the action, stating as one of the grounds therefor errors of law occurring at the trial and excepted to by plaintiff. Therewith was served a notice of the time and place of making the motion. Defendant thereafter moved to strike from the files the notices mentioned, which motion was granted.
It is urged by respondent that the facts stated do not bring petitioner's motion within the purview of the statute *436 providing for the granting of new trials, and, further, that the judgment upon the motion for a nonsuit being appealable, petitioner has by that means a plain, speedy, and adequate remedy in the ordinary course of law.
[1] That the action of the court in improperly granting or denying a motion for a nonsuit, whether made upon the opening statement or after the close of the evidence, is an error of law occurring at the trial, and that such error is ground for a new trial, has been repeatedly declared by the decisions of the courts of this state (Stow v. Superior Court,
It being our view that the cases cited have established the rule as the law of this state, it will be unnecessary to discuss the decisions of the courts of other states cited by respondent or the argument of counsel for the latter other than to point out the distinction between the cases of Abbey Land Imp. Co. v.San Mateo,
The distinction between the determination of the legal effect of the ultimate facts in issue and that of the probative effect of the evidence adduced in support of such facts as affecting the power of the trial court to entertain a motion *437
for a new trial is also pointed out in Monteverde v. SuperiorCourt,
We hold, therefore, that under the California cases cited a motion for a new trial could properly be entertained in the instant case.
This brings us to the question raised by respondent as to the proper remedy to be pursued by petitioner.
[2] The determination by a court that it is without jurisdiction is not conclusive where there is no question of fact or of the sufficiency of the facts involved in its ruling. The law especially enjoins the duty of hearing and determining all matters which are within its jurisdiction and which come properly before it; and a writ of mandate may issue in a case where such determination is erroneous (Cahill v. Superior Court,
Such being the rule it remains to be considered whether petitioner has in the premises a plain, speedy, and adequate remedy in the ordinary course of law (Code Civ. Proc., sec.
[3] As held in Hughes v. De Mund,
[4] It has been uniformly held that an appeal affords a plain, speedy, and adequate remedy not only where jurisdiction has been exceeded, but where there has been a refusal to exercise it; that the remedy by mandamus or prohibition is given only in exceptional cases, and that the remedy by appeal is not inadequate because ordinarily it *438
requires more time in its pursuit than either a proceeding in prohibition or mandamus (Lightner Mining Co. v. SuperiorCourt,
No facts being shown in the instant case which fairly create an exception to the general rule stated, and it appearing that an appeal from the original judgment will furnish a speedy and adequate remedy for the correction of the alleged error, the writ is denied.
Tyler, P.J., and Knight, J., concurred.