55 So. 455 | Ala. Ct. App. | 1911
The trial in this cause was had before the court without a jury. Judgment was rendered for defendant (appellee). No exception was taken by the plaintiff (appellant) to the findings or conclusion of the court, nor to the judgment rendered. The plaintiff made a motion for a new trial and duly excepted to the action of the court in overruling the motion, and assigns the action of the court in refusing to grant the new trial as the single proposition for review.
One of the grounds set out in the motion — i. e., newly discovered evidence — is not insisted upon nor discussed by appellant in his brief, and is waived; and the only other grounds raised by the motion for a new trial go to appellant’s contention on the motion, which are insisted upon here, that the court erred in not awarding plaintiff a judgment on the -evidence adduced upon the trial, and therefore ife in error for overruling plaintiff’s motion for a new trial.
A motion for a new" trial is'not the method to pursue to review rulings of the trial co-urfhad during the progress of the trial, not exceeded to; where exceptions duly
The sections of the acts regulating the practice and procedure in civil cases relative to appeals and review of the conclusions and judgments of the circuit court of Jefferson county and of the city court of Birmingham (from which this appeal is taken) are the same.—Acts 1888-89, pp. 797-800, and Id. pp. 992-998, § 11. In construing one of these acts, the Supreme Court of Alabama, in the case of Hood v. Pioneer M. & Mfg. Co., 95 Ala. 461, 11 South. 10, has said, speaking through Coleman, J.: “The act to regulate the practice and procedure in civil cases in the circuit court of Jefferson county, and in the Supreme Court on appeal from judgments rendered in said cases (Acts 1888-89, p. 797, § 7), provides that ‘either party may, by bill of exceptions, also present on appeal, for review, the conclusions and judgment of the court upon the evidence,’ etc. The record fails to disclose that there was any exception reserved to the conclusion and judgment of the court upon the evidence. Not having reserved an exception to the judgment of the court, this court, by the terms of the statute, is Avithout authority to revieAv the correctness of the conclusion and judgment of the court on appeal.” ' And McClellan, J., in rendering the opinion of the court ’in Williams Adm’r v. Woodward Iron Co., 106 Ala. 254, 17 South. 517, says: “The'only authority of law’for á review by this court of the conclusion and judgment'of the circuit court of Jefferson, in cases tried as this one
The only authorization for reviewing the conclusion and judgment of the trial court in this case being by bill of exceptions, it is therefore exclusive, and, no exception having been reserved to the findings and judgment of the court, we would be without jurisdiction to consider and pass upon the question.
The general statutes as amended (Code 1907, § 5361), passed subsequent to the act regulating the practice and procedure of the city court of Birmingham, authorizes a review of the fidings of the trial court on the facts without an exception taken thereto; but this general law does not repeal, and is in no way amendatory of, the act specifically regulating the procedure in
Affirmed.