98 Cal. 105 | Cal. | 1893
Upon the trial of this cause findings of fact were made and filed by the court, upon which judgment was rendered in favor of the defendant. From that judgment the plaintiff appealed directly to this court, upon the judgment-roll alone, without any bill of exceptions, and upon the hearing in this court the judgment was reversed and the superior court directed to enter a judgment upon the findings, in accordance with the prayer of the complaint (95 Cal. 353); and upon the going down of the remittitur the superior court caused judgment to be entered in favor of the plaintiffs in accordance with the directions of this court. Thereupon, within the time authorized by section 650 of the Code of Civil Procedure, the defendant prepared a bill containing certain exceptions taken by it at the trial, and the same was settled by the judge who had tried the case, and filed with the clerk. The defendant has now appealed from the judgment entered against it, as aforesaid, bringing up with the judgment-roll this bill of exceptions. The respondent moves to dismiss the appeal upon the ground
The “law of the case” is a phrase which has been formulated in this state to give expression to the rule that the final judgment of the highest court upon a question of law arising between the parties to an action on a given state of facts, establishes the rights of the parties to that controversy, and is a final determination thereof, and like a final judgment in any other case, estops the parties 'thereto from afterwards questioning its correctness. This court has no appellate jurisdiction over its own judgments, and such judgment, therefore, constitutes an estoppel of record of the highest character, and is conclusive between the parties as to the matters adjudged. Hence, it has been invariably held that upon a second appeal in a cause, this court must accept its former determination as conclusive, and is precluded from any re-examination of the matters therein determined. As this rule is, however, applicable only to matters which have been determined by the court, it is only when the same matters that were determined on the first appeal are brought before it on a second appeal that the rule can be invoked; and, being a rule which tends to prevent a judicial consideration of the case, it is not to be extended beyond the exigencies which demand its application, and it is therefore held that whenever upon the second hearing the record presents a different state of facts, the former determination ceases to be an estoppel.
When an appeal is taken to this court, the record on the appeal is brought here by the appellant, and, if the appeal is merely from the judgment, the only portion of the records of the court below that he is required to bring up is the judgment-roll and “any bill of exceptions or statement in the case upon which the appellant relies.” (Code Civ. Proe., sec. 950.) If a judgment has been rendered in favor of the defendant, and the plaintiff appeals therefrom, the defendant is only interested in maintaining the judgment, and cannot ask this court to'consider any errors against him which the court below may have committed at the trial. This court will examine only the statement or bill of exceptions upon which the appellant relies, and in the
As it is only when upon the second appeal the record presents the same matters, either of fact or of law, upon which the determination of this court was rendered at the former appeal, that that determination is held to be final, it follows that, if there is presented, upon the second appeal, a different state of facts or any errors that were committed by the trial court which were not presented in the former record, this court is at liberty to consider them as fully as though presented upon a first appeal. In case, therefore, the respondent upon the first appeal shall afterwards appeal from a judgment rendered against him upon a second trial, in which the same errors were committed as were committed at the first trial, he will not be precluded from having them considered by this court, even though the effect thereof should be a reversal of the second judgment, and indirectly a determination by this court that the first iudgmenfc of the court below should have been in his favor.
The motion is denied.
Paterson, J., and Garoutte, J., concurred.