43 Fla. 124 | Fla. | 1901
(after stating the facts.)
The only error assigned is the order granting the defendant’s motion for new trial. Orders granting new trials may now be reviewed on writ of error without a final judgment in the cause, under the provisions of section 1267 of the Revised Statutes as follows: “Upon the entry of an order granting a new trial at law, the party aggrieved by such order may, without waiting for a final judgment in the cause, prosecute a writ of error .to the proper appellate court: which said review the said order, and if the cause be reversed, shall direct final judgment to be entered in the court below, for the party who" had obtained the verdict in the court below, unless a motion in arrest of judgment, or for judgment non obstante veredicto, shall be made and prevail.” Substantially the same provision of law prevails in many of the American States, and the rules for the government of the appellate courts in reviewing such orders are practically well-settled. Thus in the case of Hicks v. Stone, 13. Minn. 434, it is said: “The appellants insist that these cases are to be decided by this court as if the motions for a new trial were made here de novo, and that the granting of a new trial is not a matter of ‘discretion in the presiding judge but to be determined by this court upon the rules and
A material issue in the case was as to whether an admitted material alteration in the time of payment in the note'/sued on,-made subsequently to its endorsement by the defendant, Solary, had been consented to and ratified by him. Upon this material issue in the case there were but two witnesses, the defendant Solary himself.
As the order must be affirmed upon the grounds already discussed it becomes unnecessary to consider other features of the motion for new trial that have been preT sented in the briefs.
The order of the Circuit, Court is hereby affirmed at the cost of the plaintiff in error.