24 Cal. 179 | Cal. | 1864
This action was tried and a verdict rendered therein in favor of the plaintiff, on the 5th day of June, 1863, and judgment was entered on the verdict on the day following—when the Court, on the application of defendant’s counsel, granted to the defendant twenty days within which to file a statement to be used on a motion for a new trial. On the Sth of the same month the defendant gave to the plaintiff and his attorneys
It will be joresumed, in the absence of anything appearing to the contrary, that the testimony in the case, with the rulings of the Court, and the exceptions taken on the trial, were filed in the office of the Clerk of the Court within five days thereafter (Laws of 1861, p. 497,) and that the same became, at the time the stipulation of the parties was filed, the statement to be used on the motion whereof notice had been given, provided the time within which a statement for such purpose could properly be filed had not fully expired.
When the application for a new trial came on to be heard, the attorney for the plaintiff objected that the Court could not entertain the motion because the defendant had not filed any statement of the grounds on which he intended to rely in support thereof. The Court overruled the objection, and heard the application upon the stipulation filed and the minutes of the evidence and proceedings taken by the Reporter, and the rulings of the Court and the exceptions referred to in such minutes, and thereupon made an order denying the motion for a new trial. From this order and the judgment the defendant in due time ajopealed.
The respondent, by his counsel, still insists upon his objection made on the hearing of the motion, and we think the objection well taken; because, by the terms of the order made
The order granted by the Court giving to the defendant twenty days in which to file a statement on motion for a new trial, is construed by the appellant’s counsel as granting to the defendant that period after the notice of the intention to move should be given, and that as the notice was filed and served on the 8th of June, he was in time if he complied with the . order on the 27th of that month; and in aid of such construction, reference is made to the decision of the Judge of the Court below, who, on the hearing of the motion, overruled the objection interposed, and thus, in effect, determined that the statement was duly prepared and filed. But the language of the order is plain and unambiguous, and its import is to be ascertained by its terms. No just construction of this order could extend the time specified to the day of the filing of the stipulation. The statute requires the statement to be prepared and filed with the Clerk within five days after notice given, or within such further time as may be granted, not exceeding-twenty days, and declares an omission to so file the statement a waiver of the right to move for a new trial. The statute here referred to is peremptory in terms, and therefore the objection of the respondent must be sustained. This leaves the case to be considered upon the judgment roll alone, and as the complaint states a cause of action against the defendant, and no error in the judgment is apparent, it must be affirmed.
Judgment affirmed.