42 P. 583 | Nev. | 1895
The facts sufficiently appear in the opinion. Appeal from an order refusing to vacate and set aside an order overruling a motion for new trial, entered under the following circumstances: Judgment having been rendered against defendant, his attorney gave notice of a motion for a new trial, and in due time filed and served a statement thereon. No evidence, however, of this service was preserved in the record, no amendments to the statement were made by the plaintiff, and no certificate was made by the clerk that none had been filed.
Gen. Stats., sec. 3219, provide that when a statement has been agreed upon it shall be authenticated by the certificate of the parties, or their attorneys, that the same has been agreed upon and is correct. When settled by the judge it shall be accompanied by his certificate that it has been allowed and is correct. When no amendments have been filed it shall be accompanied by the certificate of the clerk to that effect, and this seems to be the only certificate of the correctness of the statement then required.
In the case at bar no certificate of any kind was attached to the statement. While the record was in this condition the parties stipulated "that defendant's motion for new trial is hereby submitted to Hon. A. E. Cheney, who presided as judge in the trial of the above entitled action, for his decision, without farther argument, and that the clerk of this court may forward to said judge said statement on motion *74 for new trial, at Reno, Nevada, and that said judge may return the same to the above entitled court, to the clerk thereof, with his decision thereon."
Upon this submission, an order was made overruling the motion for new trial on the ground that the statement on which the motion was made did not appear to have been served on the plaintiff, and was in no manner authenticated.
Subsequently the motion to set aside this order was made on the ground that it had been inadvertently and prematurely made, before the statement had been settled or authenticated. No affidavit accompanied this notice, and when defendant offered to support the motion by oral testimony the offer was objected to and overruled on the ground that the notice did not give the name of any witness to be examined upon the hearing, as required by a rule of court. The motion was then overruled and this appeal followed.
The above are not all the circumstances connected with the matter, but they are all that we deem material to the decision of the appeal.
It will be noticed that there was no evidence given on the hearing that the motion for new trial had been submitted inadvertently by counsel, nor that when he signed the stipulation submitting it, he was under any misapprehension as to the condition of the statement, or the requirements of the law, or that he expected the statement to be settled or authenticated before the motion was ruled upon. Indeed, the motion was not based on any of the grounds above suggested, but upon the ground alone that the order having been made before the statement had been settled or authenticated, it was irregular and premature. We must consequently presume that in submitting the motion counsel acted advisedly, and intended it to be submitted in just the shape in which it was done.
Under these circumstances our attention must be confined to the point last suggested, namely, that it was error for the court to rule upon the motion before the statement had been certified by the clerk, or in some manner authenticated or settled.
That the order was not erroneous has been a number of times decided by this court. (Lamburth v. Dalton,
But in none of these cases was the point made that the ruling was premature and irregular; we do not, therefore consider them decisive of the question now presented, and to the end that cases may, as far as possible, be decided upon their merits, and not upon procedure, and in accordance with what seem a better and more just line of authorities (Thomas v. Sullivan,
The ordinary rule is that a party cannot avail himself of an error to which he has consented, or which has been induced by his own acts when free from misapprehension or mistake. "A party who expressly asks that a designated ruling be made cannot avail himself of that ruling on appeal, although it may be material and may be exhibited by the record. What a party expressly asks cannot be made available as error without a violation of the plainest principles of justice." (Elliott, App. Proc, sec. 626.) The error claimed here consisted of passing on the motion for new trial before the statement had been duly authenticated. But this is precisely what counsel stipulated should be done. That is, he stipulated that the motion should be passed upon, and as the statement was then incomplete, and it is not shown, or suggested, that he did not know of it, we must presume that he did, and intended it to be submitted in just the shape in which it then was. Doubtless, if the judge had reason to believe that the stipulation had been signed and submitted inadvertently he might have called counsel's attention to the condition of the record, when probably it would have been corrected, but this was a matter in his discretion, and we must not forget that it might have been the intention to submit the motion in just the shape in which it was done. If *76
such were the case, then the judge's only duty was to pass upon it just as he did. At any rate, having stipulated for the judge to rule upon the motion, so long as such stipulation stands uncontroverted and unexplained, he cannot claim such ruling to constitute error. (Thompson v. Connolly,
If it be further said that by the stipulation plaintiff had waived the want of proof of service upon him, and had waived the absence of authentication, while this may, perhaps, be true, it simply amounts to this, that then the motion was not submitted inadvertently, and the ruling thereon was upon a good statement, and not premature or improvident, although placed upon a wrong ground, and the motion to vacate was not defendant's remedy, but an appeal directly from the order. (Coombs v. Hibberd,
The order is affirmed.