71 Cal. 491 | Cal. | 1886
The following statement of facts in this case is admitted to be true and correct:—
On January 9, 1882, Holcomb et al. brought an action in the Justice’s Court of the city and county of San Francisco against George Lang, the petitioner herein. He demurred to the complaint, and the demurer was sustained; the plaintiff declined to amend, and judgment final was entered on the demurrer, whereupon an appeal was prosecuted by the plaintiffs in said action to the
An application is now made to this court for a writ of review on the facts hereinabove set forth.
In the first place, the demurrer to the complaint was sustained by the Superior Court (Judge Allen presiding) on the eighth day of May, 1882, and “it therefore became the duty of the clerk to enter the appropriate judgment in the records of the court.” (Gallardo v. Reed, 49 Cal. 346; Barron v. Deleval, 58 Cal. 95.) This would have ended the case, but it appears that subsequently on the eighth day of October, 1884, a proposed statement on motion for a new trial was filed in the case, which statement was afterward, on due notice, stricken from the calendar. The next step in the case was taken on November. 14, 1884, when notice was given of a motion for a rehearing of the demurrer to the complaint “ upon which rested an appeal in the action,”
When a motion for a! new trial is made and passed upon, either granted or denied, it is not competent for the court afterward to set its ruling aside and make another order in the case. (People v. Center, 61 Cal. 194; Coombs v. Hibberd, 43 Cal. 453.) The subsequent orders in the case were equally unauthorized by law.
It follows from what has been said that the order of the court below, made December 12,1884, granting the so-called “ rehearing,” and the subsequent orders in the case, must be set aside and annulled, and it is so ordered.
McKee, J., Thornton, J., and Sharpstein, J., concurred.
Rehearing denied.