54 N.W. 1032 | N.D. | 1893
In this action the verdict was for the defendants. Plaintiff moved for a new trial, basing its motion upon “the pleadings in the case, the minutes and memoranda of the court, the stenographer’s report of the evidence adduced upon the trial, and the affidavit of plaintiff’s counsel.” The motion was initiated by the service of a notice of intention stating that the “grounds upon which such motion would be urged are: First, That the court erred in withdrawing said cause from the jury, and in ordering the jury to render a verdict for the defendants, to which action of the court the plaintiff duly excepted at the time. Second, That if the evidence adduced and delivered to the jury on said trial was in fact or in\ the opinion of the court insufficient to make a fair, prima facie case for the consideration of the jury, such defect of proof resulted from the oversight of the plaintiff’s counsel, and not from an actual lack of evidence to support said cause as set up in the complaint; and the plaintiffs are justly entitled to have another opportunity to establish the merits of their cause before a jury.” The motion was denied, and judgment was entered for defendants dismissing the action, and for costs. No appeal is taken from the judgment, but plaintiff appeals to this court from the order denying the motion for a new trial.
The Judge of the District Court has by his certificate properly identified the papers mentioned below as the papers used on the motion for the new trial, and the clerk has certified such papers to this court, under § 5, Ch. 120, Laws 1891, providing that, “if the appeal is from an order, he shall transmit the order appealed from, and the original papers used by each party on the application for the order appealed from.” The papers thus certified up are the following: Complaint; answer; verdict; judgment; order
denying motion for a new trial; said notice of intention; an affidavit of plaintiff’s counsel, referred to in such notice; a document purporting to be a transcript of the evidence, rulings, exceptions, etc., had and taken upon the tidal of this action, which is certified to be correct by the official stenographer of the District Court, but not otherwise authenticated as a true version of the proceedings
In this court plaintiff has assigned only the following errors: First, “the court erred in withdrawing the case from the jury, and ordering a verdict for the defendants;” second, “if, as the court seemed to think, there was in fact a deficiency of proof, then the court erred in refusing a new trial to afford the plaintiff another opportunity to establish its claim;” third, “the, court erred in refusing a new trial.” The third assignment of error cannot be sustained, unless some legal ground or reason for granting a new trial was presented to the trial court.
The second assignment of error does not purport to point out any specific error, either of law or fact, which occurred at the trial, and which would of itself constitute a legal ground for a new trial of the action. A deficiency of proof offered at a trial certainly does not alone constitute any ground for a new trial enumerated in § 5088, Comp. Laws. The assignment omits to state, and nothing in the record supplies the omission, if it could be supplied, that any newly discovered evidence had come to plaintiff’s knowledge since the trial; much less is there any attempt to excuse the laches which would have been involved in the non-production of evidence know by plaintiff to exist, and which was not produced at the trial. It follows that the second assignment of error must, for the reasons stated, be overruled.
The first assignment of error, according to the stenographer's transcript, is predicated upon an alleged ruling of the District Court made after plaintiff had rested its case, and is based upon the evidence adduced by the plaintiff. In order to review this ruling, the fact that the ruling was made and excepted to,
We do'not hold, nor do we intimate the opinion; that where a motion for a new trial is based exclusively upon affidavits and upon the grounds stated in the first four subdivisions of § 5088, Comp. Laws, that a bill or statement must be made a record for use in this court. Our views in this case have reference only to cases arising under the last three subdivisions of said section. Our law and practice relating to bills of exception and statements is largely drawn from the State of California, but in that state appeals