Lead Opinion
Respondent has filed a petition for a rehearing. Two points are urged wherein it is claimed the court was in error in its previous opinion,
Second. Respondent complains of a statement in the opinion which is an apparent criticism by the court directed to counsel for appellant. The statement is: "It appears from the brief that counsel for defendants took the view that since Garner was deceased, Mr. Thomas would not be permitted to testify in regard to the matter. In this counsel was in error because the executorhaving opened up this alleged conversation and agreement, Mr.Thomas could testify as to that matter and explain or deny thesame." (Italics added.) It is argued that, since the alleged conversation was brought out in cross-examination of the executor, it was not opened up for rebuttal. As far as this case is concerned, it does not matter, because no attempt was made to rebut it. It is therefore unnecessary to decide whether or not such situation opens up the alleged conversation for rebuttal, and so we do not decide that matter. The statement from the original opinion, quoted above, is therefore stricken and deleted from the opinion rendered, and as so corrected the opinion stands. *Page 297
The petition for a rehearing is denied.
FOLLAND, C.J., and HANSON and MOFFAT, JJ., concur.
Concurrence Opinion
The opinion on rehearing states that two points are urged in the petition for a rehearing wherein it is claimed this court committed error. I think there is a third which seems to me more important and difficult than the two mentioned in Mr. Justice LARSON'S opinion.
The opinion of the court, speaking through Mr. Justice Larson, in this case,
Had the matter of the sufficiency of the answer praying reformation been timely and properly raised, I believe a good deal might be said for plaintiff's position that the answer was required to contain an allegation that defendant had not been guilty of negligence in signing the mortgage covering lot 1 which, it was claimed, was inadvertently included. There is a division of authority on the question of whether the moving party in a suit for reformation must negative negligence or only gross negligence. See the well-considered notes in 28 L.R.A., N.S., 882; 45 A.L.R. 700; 65 Am. St. Rep. 485; 23 R.C.L. 360.
The pleading in this case alleges that defendant "had no attorney or anyone skilled in land matters * * * and did not ascertain" that lot 1 was included. This statement *Page 298
rather shows negligence than the lack of it. In Hitchens v.Milner Land, Coal Townsite Co.,
Reams v. McMinnville,
Seemingly, in this state the rule is that reformation of a written instrument will not be decreed where the party seeking reformation is guilty of negligence only. Nordfors v. Knight,
Error in overruling the demurrer was not assigned or argued in this court on appeal because of the judgment in plaintiff's favor below. As a general rule courts will not *Page 299
grant rehearings to consider questions which could have been urged in the first hearing but were not. Western Securities Co.
v. Silver King Consolidated Min. Co.,
The respondent did not urge the present ground upon the consideration of the court because he was successful in the district court. But respondent does not say he could not have urged it on appeal. The situation is not unlike that in MillerBrewing Co. v. Capitol Distributing Co.,
In this case it would have required not a cross-appeal, but a cross-assignment.
Where a demurrer is assigned, but not argued in the brief on appeal, it may be considered to have been abandoned. Dayton v.Free,
A rehearing, therefore, must be denied because the question of error in the ruling on the demurrer was abandoned.