302 P.2d 1017 | Or. | 1956
The notice of appeal addressed to the plaintiff and his attorneys says:
“You, and each of you, will please take notice that the defendant in the above entitled action does hereby appeal from the Order of the Circuit Court of the State of Oregon, for Wasco County, which sustained the motion of the plaintiff to discharge the jury and grant a new trial as follows: * *
At that point the notice of appeal quotes the motion which was made in the circuit court by plaintiff’s counsel “for a mistrial” and the ruling of the trial judge which sustained the motion. The trial judge, in ruling, said: “I will grant the motion for mistrial.”
The plaintiff now moves to dismiss the appeal upon the ground that within the purview of OES 19.010, which authorizes appeals only from final orders of the circuit court, the order challenged by the notice of appeal is not a final one.
It will be observed that no judgment of any kind had been entered by the court before it declared a mistrial. It is our belief that the order mentioned in the notice of appeal and which the appellant seeks to challenge was not final. Phoebus v. Connellee (Tex Civ App), 228 SW 982; Firestone v. Hall (Tex Civ App), 143 SW2d 797.
Notwithstanding that the notice of appeal states that it is directed to the order “which sustained the motion of the plaintiff to discharge the jury and grant a new trial,” the appellant’s- brief declares a purpose to challenge the action of the trial judge in rejecting a verdict and in discharging the jury.
It is our belief that, in our search for the order which the would-be appellant seeks to challenge, we are bound by his notice of appeal. The motion to dismiss is sustained.