Thе petitioner sought a writ of mandate to compel the respondent to issue a writ of execution upon a judgment which was set aside by an order granting a new trial. The petition attacked the validity of the order granting a new trial. The respondent defended the order and raised the separate defense that petitioner had an adequate remedy by appeal. A minute order denying the petition was entered and from this order the petitioner has appealed.
Petitioner as plaintiff had a verdict upon a trial to a jury in the municipal court. The defendants’ motion for a new trial was granted on the ground of insufficiency of the evidence by an order signed by Judge Kaufman on October 6, 1943, with directions to his clerk to file it on October 14, unless the judge directed him otherwise. Judge Kaufman then left the State of California and was in Mexico on the day of October 14. The order was filed on that day. It was a conditional order granting the motion for a new trial unless the plaintiff within ten days thereafter consented to a reduction of the verdict. The sixtieth day, or the last day upon which the motion for a new trial could have been granted under section 660 of the Code of Civil Procedure, was October 19th. Hence the effect of the conditional order was to attempt to give the plaintiff five additional days within which to consent to a reduction of the verdict. The petitioner took an appеal to the superior court from the order granting a new trial and moved to vacate it in the municipal court upon grounds which were thereafter pleaded in his petition for a writ of mandate. The motion was denied and the record is silent as to further proceedings on the motion and on the appeal from the order granting a new trial.
On his appeal here from the order denying his petition for a writ of mandate the appellant advances three grounds for a reversal which we will consider in the order presented.
First, can a judge of the municipal court perform the judicial act of granting a motion for a new trial while outside the territorial limits of the state. The question was directly answered in
People
v.
Ruef,
Second, apрellant contends that the order granting a new trial must be held void because it contained a condition permitting him to consent to a reduction of the verdict on a day subsequent to the sixty day period. It would seem more logical that if the court attempted to impose a condition upon the order which it had no power to impose the condition alone should fall rather than the order as a whole. It is manifest from the language of the order that the court intended to grant a new trial unless a portion of the verdict was remitted. It had the power to grant the plaintiff five days to make an election, but could not continue that time over the sixty day period. But the plaintiff did not make an election to remit at any time and was therefore not prejudiced by the invalid part of the order. If the superior court held adversely to the petitioner on that ground it is not necessary for us to decide *147 whether that holding was error because the order which is the subject of this appeal must be affirmed for the reasons hereinafter stated.
Third, the question argued in the briefs as to the propriety of proceedings for a writ of mandate is not the true question presented by the record. The appellant, relying upon the majority opinion in
Kahn
v.
Smith,
But the case which controls the question presented here is
Andrews
v.
Police Court,
*149 Upon the authority of the cases cited the correct rule seems to be that when the court to which the petition for a writ of mandate is addressed in the first instance determines that the petitioner has another “plain, speedy, and adequate remеdy, in the ordinary court of law” (Code Civ. Proc., § 1086) its decision that the writ should not issue is based upon a finding of fact supported by all the circumstances of the particular case. When such a decision comes out of the superior court it is like any other judgment subject to appеal to a reviewing court, but, like all other judgments, it carries the presumption of regularity though open to attack for error. If no error of law appears in the record and the attack is limited to a claimed abuse of discretion in denying the writ applied for something more than the bare assertion of abuse of discretion must be made. Here we must assume, since there is no showing to the contrary, that the trial court denied the writ because it found the petitioner had a speedy and adequate remedy by appeal. In view of the current practice by which appeals from the municipal courts are given a speedy hearing and determination it must be apparent that if the respondent court found that appellant had another adequate remedy it committed no error in this respect, at least, no errоr is shown on this record.
The judgment is affirmed.
Goodell, J., and Dooling, J. pro tem., concurred.
A petition for a rehearing was denied March 22, 1945, and the following opinion was thereupon rendered:
In his petition for a rehearing appellant criticizes the statement in the opinion that the order signed by the judge on October 6th was “filed” on October 14th by the clerk of the court. Appellant states that such order “was never filed anywhere.” We took the recital from the verified petition of appellant for a writ of mandate where he alleged that the order granting a new trial “was dated,
filed
and entered on the 14th day of Octobеr, 1943, by a deputy clerk.” This allegation was not denied in the return and we may assume that it may be taken as admitted. Appellant refers to some conflicting testimony taken in another proceeding, but that is not important here. We are concerned only with these conceded fаcts—that, whatever the paper may be
*150
called, a submission slip, an order, or a memorandum, it was signed by the judge within time and was either entered or filed on October 14th when the judge was out of the state. In any event the matter is apparently concluded by
Cox
v.
Tyrone Power Enterprises,
Appellant criticizes the statement that he took an appeal to the superior court from the order granting a new trial. He says that though such fact was alleged in the return no proof was offered and he cites seсtion 462 of the Code of Civil Procedure to the effect that affirmative allegations in the answer are deemed controverted. That is not the rule in mandamus proceedings. The return is accepted as true unless controverted by the petitioner. (See Code Civ. Proc., § 1091; 16 Cal.Jur. 868;
McClatchy
v.
Matthews,
For this reason we reaffirm that it is proper to assume that the writ of mandate was denied because the trial court found *151 that the petitioner had another adequate remedy. References to remarks made by the judge during the course of the trial are not controlling. This rule is so well settled that citation of authority is unnecessary.
The petition for a rehearing is denied.
Appellant’s petition for a hearing by the Supreme Court was denied April 19, 1945. Carter, J., and Traynor, J., voted for a hearing.
