| Cal. | Dec 15, 1850
By the Court,
On the re-argument, of this cause the objection was taken by the appellant, that this court cannot, after its judgment has been pronounced, direct a re-hearing.
Section 280 of the Practice Act provides that, “ after an ap- “ peal shall have been heard and determined, the judgment or “ order of the supreme court therein, and all things concerning “ the same, shall be remitted to the district court of the proper “ county, and thereupon such further proceedings shall be had “ in that court as may be necessary to carry such judgment or “ order into effect.”
Section 18 of the act organizing this court is to the same effect. It declares that, “ the supreme court may reverse, “affirm, or modify the judgment or order appealed from, and “ its judgment shall be remitted as soon as practicable, after “ judgment pronounced, to the court below, to be enforced ac- “ cording to law.”
We are of opinion that this court loses jurisdiction of the cause, when the remittitur has been sent to, and filed in, the court below; but that our control over the cause does not cease
In this cause the remittitur, it appears, was filed with the cleric of the district court “ on or before” the 25th day of December last; but the order for a re-hearing was made and entered on the 18th day of the same month, when the court had jurisdiction of the cause and the power to make the order. The remittitur was improperly sent to the district court after the entry of the order granting a re-hearing, and such act ought not to be permitted to supersede the order.
We have reconsidered our decision made on the point submitted on the first argument, and think it correct.
On the re-hearing a new point has been made by the respondent, to understand which, it is necessary to advert to the facts presented by the record.
The action is brought by the indorsee of a promissory note payable to order against the maker. The declaration alleges the making of the note and the indorsement, and the answer denies generally in the terms of the old general issue in as-sumpsit., that the defendant undertook and promised in manner and form, &c. The point now made is, that the answer does sot deny the indorsement of the note, and that, consequently, such indorsement was admitted of record.
The first subdivision of the 45th section of the Practice Act provides, that in respect to each allegation of the complaint controverted by the defendant, the answer shall contain a general or specific denial thereof, or a denial thereof according to the information and belief of the defendant, or of any knowledge thereof sufficient to form a belief; and section 68 declares that every material allegation of the complaint not controverted by the answer, shall, for the purposes of the action, be taken as true.
It has been held under the new code of procedure in Hew York, which, upon the question now under consideration, is the same as our practice act, that the plea of the general issue would
If the plaintiff deemed the answer insufficient to controvert the allegation of indorsement, he should have put his case in the district court upon that ground, and thus the defendant would have known the real objection to his answer, and might have made an application to the court for permission to amend, or to withdraw his answer and substitute another in its place. But the plaintiff tried the cause in the same manner as if the averments in the complaint liad been properly controverted by the answer, and then, when the cause comes into this court, the objection to the insufficiency of the answer is raised for the first time on the second argument of the cause.
We think the proper practice to be established is, that if the plaintiff considers the answer a nullity, he should raise the point in the court below and have it passed upon; and that if he there rests his cause on the ground of the want of an affidavit, he ought not to be permitted to say here, for the first time, that the answer does not, in a proper form, controvert the allegations of the complaint.
It was intimated by the court on the argument, that on a rehearing the whole cause was open and either party might raise such objections and make such points, as he could have raised and made on the first argument. On reflection we think otherwise. party should present his whole case on the first hearing, and ought not to be permitted to argue it by piece-meal. This is the practice in Louisiana, (1 Robinsons Rep. 330,) and, as a general rule, we approve of it.
Our former decision granting a new trial must stand. The defendant is to have leave to move the district court to be permitted to amend his answer on such terms as may be deemed just.
Ordered accordingly.