57 Cal. 629 | Cal. | 1881
This is an application by F. J. Clark for a writ of mandamus to the Hon. A. M. Crane, Judge as above stated, commanding him to proceed to settle the statement and bill of exceptions in the case of the Pacific Mutual Life Insurance Company against the above applicant Clark, and to proceed to hear a motion for a new trial after said statement has been settled.
The following are the facts which appear, and on which this application must be decided. A trial came on in the case above named before the Court (the judge aforesaid presiding) and a -jury. A verdict was rendered for the plaintiff on the 8th day of December, 1880, and on the same day an entry of the verdict was made in the minutes of the Court. Immediately after the entry of this verdict, and the same day, the following order was made and entered:
“ On motion of the defendant’s counsel, it is further ordered that a stay of execution for the space of thirty days be entered.”
Ho other order in relation to any stay of proceedings than this was ever at any time made by the Court.
On the 20th of December, 1880, the attorney of defendant Clark applied to the respondent at chambers for an order granting the defendant five days’ further time to prepare and serve notice of motion for a new trial in said cause. On making such application, the counsel stated that it was the last day for giving said notice, and offered some excuse, which was not remembered by the judge, but which he deemed sufficient, for not having made an earlier application. That relying on this statement, and not remembering when the verdict was rendered, he improvidently granted an order extending the time to prepare and serve said notice. By this order made by the judge on the 20th of December, 1880, defendant was allowed five days from said day to prepare and serve the notice aforesaid. On the same day, the judge, on the application of defendant’s counsel, made a further order allowing the defendant ten days
On the 24-th of December, 1880, the defendant served and filed a notice of motion for a new trial; and on the 4th of January, 1881, he obtained from the judge a further order extending the time two days from that day in which to propose and serve a statement on this motion. On the next day defendant served the proposed statement on the attorneys for plaintiff, and on the 15th day of the same month the plaintiff in the cause served amendments proposed by it to the statement. In proposing these amendments, plaintiff reserved the right to object to the hearing of the motion for a new trial, and to the use on said hearing of defendant’s said notice of motion and his proposed statement, on the ground that the said notice and statement, and each of them, were not served or filed within the time required by law or any valid order of the judge, and to object on any other grounds as he might be advised, and expressly declined to Waive any right in regard to the matters just above mentioned.
On the 18th of January, 1881, defendant Clark duly served notice on the attorneys of plaintiff that he would not adopt the proposed amendments, and that the statement and amendments would on the 24th of January, 1881, be presented to the respondent for settlement. The matter of the said settlement came on to be heard before the Court on the day last named, on which day it made an order as follows :
“ Pacific Mutual Life Insurance Company v. F. J. Clark.
Monday, Jan’y 24th, 1881.
“This cause coming on to be heard on the application of the defendant to the Court to settle the statement on motion for a new trial, the plaintiff by its counsel protested against the Court taking any action thereon, on the ground that no notice of motion for a new trial had ever been given as or within the time required by law. It appearing to the Court that the verdict was rendered and judgment entered December 8th, 1880, that no notice of motion for new trial was given until the 24th of December, 1880, and no order made extending the time for filing notice until December 25th, 1880, the Court now holds it
On behalf of the application for the writ, it is urged upon us that the proceedings on behalf of defendant are all regular, and were in time. As above stated, the verdict was rendered on the 8th of December, 1880, and on that day a stay of execution for thirty days was ordered, on motion of defendant’s counsel. No further steps were taken until the 20th of the month named, when an order was procured allowing five days from that date to prepare and serve a notice of motion for a new trial. This order, it is contended by defendant, is regular and valid. As to this, we are referred to § 1,054 of the Code of Civil Procedure. That section provides that “ when an act to be done, as provided in this Code, relates to the * * * preparation of statements or of bills of exceptions, or of amendments thereto other than of appeal, the time allowed by this Code may be expended, upon good cause shown, by the Court in which the action is pending, or the judge thereof, etc.; such extension, however, is not to exceed thirty days without the consent of the adverse party.”
The party intending to move for a new trial has a period of ten days after the verdict of the jury within which to file witli the clerk and serve upon the adverse party a notice of his intention to make such motion. (Code Civ. Proc. § 659.) The language of the section is strong; it uses the words “ must within ten days ” take this step. If he does not give such notice within the period above mentioned, his right to move is gone. The Court or judge can extend the time under § 1,054 above cited, but such extension must be granted within the period of ten days, or within such other period during which the riuht to ¡rive such notice is still alive. After the right to give such notice is gone, giving further time could not be called an extension of the time, but it would be in effect reviving a right which no longer exists. In other words, when such right to give notice is gone, there is really no period of time to extend. The time ends with the period which the law allows for giving such notice; and when such time ends, to hold that the Court or judge can extend it, would be to affirm that the
The notice given was then, in fact, no notice. As the notice is the foundation of the whole proceeding upon which it must rest, and there being no notice, when the further order was made on the day just above mentioned, extending the time to prepare and serve a statement, such order was likewise invalid.
But it is said that it was the duty of the judge to have settled the statement that the defendant might have an opportunity to prosecute his motion for a new trial, and if denied, bring the whole matter before this Court for review through the process of appeal; and to sustain this contention, we are referred to Quivcy v. Gambert, 32 Cal. 304. In that case the plaintiff recovered judgment in the Court below. The defendant moved for a new trial, and filed a statement. 'The Court, on motion of plaintiff’s attorney, struck the statement from the files. The defendant appealed from this order. On motion of the respondent, the Supreme Court dismissed the appeal, on the ground that such an order, though made after final judgment, was not appealable, following several cases cited in the opinion.
This would ordinarily have ended the cause in that Court. But the Court entered into a discussion of the proper method of procedure in such cases, and held that the practice of striking out the statement was irregular, and without the sanction of any provision of the statute. The opinion concludes with advising the Court below to set aside its order striking out the statement, and to allow the motion for a new trial to proceed to a hearing on the statement, as if the party moving had complied with the statute in all regards. The party who has recovered judgment is also advised as to the course he should pursue in order to save his right. One of the learned judges dissented from the conclusion reached by his associates. This cause was subsequently reviewed in the case of Calderwood v. Peyser, 42 Cal. 110. In this cause the Court came to the conclusion
If the order before us was one striking the statement from the files, there is then a remedy by appeal, according to the rule established by the case just above cited. This is generally regarded as fatal to an application for a writ of mandate, and has been in this State repeatedly so held. (See Peralta v. Adams, 2 Cal. 595 ; Fremont v. Merced M. Co. 9 id. 18; Ludlum v. Fourth District Court, 9 id. 13; Early v. Mannix, 15 id. 149; People v. Sexton, 24 id. 84; Clark v. Minnis, 50 id. 509.)
The orders under consideration are special orders, made after final judgment was entered, on the 8th of December, 1880, and the orders in question were not made until the 20th of that month. These orders are likewise appealable under the provisions of the Code. They are as much special as an order striking a statement from the files, and therefore, within the rule of Calderwood v. Peyser, are appealable. If the facts do not appear on the record, they may be made to appear by bill of exceptions, as was held in Pieper v. Centenella Co. (56 Cal. 173), and the whole matter brought here by the ordinary process of appeal.
It may be said that where the remedy by appeal is not a speedy and adequate remedy, then the writ of mandate should issue. This was so held in Merced M. Co v. Fremont, 7 Cal. 130.
Then admitting, for the argument, that the remedy by manda
Says Mr. Broom, in his very excellent work in explanation and exposition of Legal Maxims, “ It is a maxim of our legal author’s, as well as a dictate of common sense, that the law will not itself attempt to do an act which would be vain, lex nil frustra facii, nor to enforce one which would be frivolous, lex ncmincm cogitad vana seuinutilia.” The law will not, in the language of the old reports, enforce any one to do a thing which will be vain and fruitless. ” (See Broom’s Legal Maxims, “ Lex non cogit ad invpossibilia,” 6th Am. Ed. 248, 249, citing 3 Johns.
An issue was made by the petition and answer in this cause, as to the orders of the Court below, which are mentioned above, and an order was made by this Court referring the matter to determine what orders were actually made by the Superior Court. The referee seems to have been of opinion that he had to take oral testimony to determine this fact; whereas, an inspection of the records of the Court was only necessary. This Court knows of no authority it has to change the orders of the lower Court in such a case as the one before us, by oral testimony or any other mode. If the order is incorrectly entered, and a correction is desired, the application must be made to the court which made it. We know of no means that this Court has to correct such mistakes if any exist. Every court must be the guardian of its own records ; and their correctness must be conclusively assumed in this Court. '(People v. Judge of Tenth District Court, 9 Cal. 21.) It was entirely useless to have taken oral testimony as to such orders. The records of the Court were the best and only evidence of the orders made. If any mistake had been made by the Court below in the entry of the orders before us, we have no doubt they would have been promptly corrected by that Court on a proper proceeding. Until such alleged mistake has been corrected by that tribunal, we must accept them as they come to us from the records of that Court.
From what has been said above, our conclusion must be that the writ be denied, and it is so ordered.
Mtrick, J., and Sharpstein, J., concurred.