236 P. 336 | Cal. Ct. App. | 1925
This appeal is from an order of the trial court relieving the defendant from its default in preparing and serving its draft of a bill of exceptions within the time allowed by law.
From the affidavit of Arthur L. Levinsky, one of the attorneys for defendant, it appears that judgment in the action was entered on the eighth day of November, 1923; that on the next day affiant requested the official court reporter to prepare a transcript of all the testimony taken at the trial and that the reporter agreed to do so; that such transcript was delivered on the fourteenth day of December, 1923, and "immediately upon receipt of the aforesaid transcript . . . affiant began dictating . . . the proposed bill of exceptions . . . and ever since the fourteenth day of December, 1923, save and except on Sundays and legal holidays" affiant's stenographer "has been actively and continuously engaged in preparing said proposed bill of exceptions"; that such transcript contains 351 pages of typewritten matter, without including the instructions or special findings of the jury, "and that by reason thereof it would have been impossible to prepare said proposed bill of exceptions within a shorter period of time *775 than has been already occupied in the preparation thereof; that affiant has had charge of the preparations of said proposed bill of exceptions, and he has continuously, zealously, and diligently dictated the same, and has used every effort, together with the aforesaid stenographer . . . to complete said proposed bill of exceptions; . . . that the appeal from the judgment . . . which is about to be taken by said defendant is not taken by said defendant for mere purposes of delay, but for the reason that said defendant believes, and its counsel believes, that said defendant has meritorious grounds of appeal, and said appeal will be diligently prosecuted." The affidavit further states that affiant "believed that a notice of intention to move for a new trial on the part of defendant . . . had been given, served and filed herein, and by reason of the said belief . . . your affiant did not, neither did his partner, Gilbert L. Jones, preserve the time within which to prepare and serve the aforesaid bill of exceptions, and it was first discovered by affiant on the 3rd day of January, 1924, when affiant was examining the records and files in the above-entitled action in the office of the clerk of the above court, that no notice of intention to move for a new trial in the above-entitled action had been served or filed by defendant; . . . that if a notice of intention to move for a new trial had been served and filed by the defendant . . . the time within which said defendant would have been required to serve its proposed bill of exceptions herein would have been extended to at least the 26th day of January, 1924; that plaintiff herein, therefore, has suffered no injury in point of time, or otherwise, by reason of the failure of said defendant herein failing to preserve its time within which to serve said proposed bill of exceptions, and will not be injured, especially by the reason of the fact that said proposed bill of exceptions is virtually completed, and can be completed by the 7th day of January, 1924, and that the same will be ready to be served on the 14th day of January, 1924, on the hearing of the motions that will be made by the defendant . . . for the purpose of opening the said default." The motion was heard and granted on the fourteenth day of January, 1924. The proposed bill of exceptions was admitted in evidence on the hearing of the motion. The notice of motion and the foregoing *776 affidavit are dated January 4, 1924. It does not appear when they were served.
[1] The notice stated that the motion would be made "upon this notice, and upon the records, pleading, files and minutes of the court, in the above-entitled action, upon the affidavit of Arthur L. Levinsky, served and filed herewith, and upon such other evidence either oral or documentary as may be produced on the hearing of the motion, and upon the said proposed bill of exceptions, which will be there and then ready for service." The proposed bill of exceptions was not served with the notice. Plaintiff objected to the hearing of the motion upon the ground of such failure of service of the proposed bill. The draft of the bill of exceptions was not admitted in evidence for the purpose of proving anything contained therein, but "for the purpose of showing that the defendant Southern Pacific Company in pursuing the preparation of said proposed bill of exceptions had acted in good faith, and that said proposed bill of exceptions was ready for service at said time, and it was and is stipulated that said proposed bill of exceptions may be omitted from this bill of exceptions on behalf of the plaintiff Ruth Jones." No objection was made to the admission of the proposed bill for the purposes stated, but plaintiff's objection was "to the hearing of said motion." Section
[2] It is contended that no affidavit of merits accompanied the application for relief. The affidavit states "that said defendant believes, and its counsel believes, that said defendant has meritorious grounds of appeal." It is urged that the affidavit of merits "should have shown that the prospective appellant had consulted counsel and had been advised by them that in their opinion it had reasonable grounds to expect a reversal of the judgment appealed from, *777 if the appeal were considered on the merits." It is a general rule that an affidavit of merits should be made by a party to the action, because ordinarily he is more familiar with the facts than is his attorney, but in this case the attorney who conducted the litigation is doubtless more familiar than the defendant with the grounds of appeal, and the belief, or opinion, of such attorney that there are meritorious grounds of appeal contained in a record which he himself prepared ought to be considered a sufficient showing of merits.
[3] The affidavit does not state that defendant had intended to move for a new trial, but only that affiant believed that such a notice had been served and filed. The showing of mistake is not strong and, as said in Harbaugh v. Land Water Co.,
Immediately after the return of the verdict the defendant, under the provisions of section 629 of the Code of Civil Procedure, made a motion for judgment in favor of defendant notwithstanding the verdict. The defendant did not, in the motion, reserve "the right to apply for a new trial" in the event of the denial of the motion. Appellant contends that the defendant thereby forfeited its right to move for a new trial and that therefore defendant's counsel could not have believed that a motion for a new trial had been made. It is not necessary to construe section 629, because if it be conceded that appellant's construction thereof is correct, it would only go to the weight of affiant's statement in the affidavit that he believed the notice of intention to move for a new trial had been given, a question for the trial court's determination.
The order is affirmed.
*779Jones, J., pro tem., and Plummer, J., concurred.