60 P. 888 | Ariz. | 1900
On May 31, 1899, the appellant, Frank M. Main, brought action in the district court of the first judicial district, county of Santa Cruz, against the appellees, to have certain property described in his complaint decreed to be community property, and to have a certain deed executed by appellee Francis Main to appellee Mary Marsh annulled. At the time of the commencement of the action appellant, Frank M. Main, and appellee Francis Main were husband and wife, and had been ever since the year 1867. Appellee Mary Marsh was the daughter, issue of said marriage, and George B. Marsh was her husband. The property described in the complaint was lot 1, block 10, lots 10 and 11, block 6, lots 1, 2, and 3, block 7, and an undivided one-half interest in lot 11, block 2; all in the town of Ñogalés, county of Santa Cruz. The title to said property stood in the name of the plaintiff, Frank M. Main, except lot 10, block 6, and lot 2, block 7, which last-named lots were in the name of the wife, and had never been in the name of the husband, conveyances having been made direct to her from former owners. On the twentieth day of February, 1894, the husband, by deed of conveyance reciting a consideration of five dollars in money ‘ ‘ and for love and affection that he bears unto the said party of the second part,” conveyed unto his wife, Francis Main, an undivided one-half interest in lot 11, block 2, and lot numbered 1 in block 10, lot 11 in block 6, and lots 3 and 4 in block 7. On the 6th of March, 1899, the wife, Francis Main, “in
As to the first assignment of error,—to wit, that the court erred in overruling the motion for a new trial,—the abstract of the record does not show that any motion for a new trial was ever made, as it should do if appellant expects this court to look into that question. Turning to the files of the district court, which are lodged with the clerk of this court, we find a motion for a new trial was made upon general allegations of error. As we said in the case of Miller v. Douglas (decided at this term), ante, p. 41, 60 Pac. 722: “Our rules of court (rule 6, 4 Ariz. xi, 35 Pac. vii) provide, that ‘all assignment of errors must distinctly specify each ground of error relied upon, and the particular ruling complained of.’ Subdivision 2 of that rule provides: ‘If the assignment of error be that the court overruled a motion for a new trial, and the motion is based upon more than one ground, the same will not be considered as distinct and specific by this court, unless each ground is separately and distinctly stated in the assignment of errors.’ Counsel relies on the. statute in relation to motions for new trial, approved March 22, 1893 (act No. 21, Laws 1893), and says that, if the motion for a new trial is not required to be specific, an assignment of error which specifies the general grounds of the motion in conformity with the statute is sufficient. Even without the aid of our rules, we feel appellant’s contention is untenable; but, inasmuch as the rule was adopted by the court after the act referred to was passed, the rule operates upon the statute in such a way as to make it necessary in the assignment of errors that ‘the court erred in overruling a motion for a new trial’ to specify in what particular the court erred; all of which can be readily done without stating the argument necessary to be employed to sustain the assignment.”
As to the second, fourth, fifth, and sixth assignments of error, under the well-established rule of this court, and un
The third assignment of error, to wit, that the, court erred in this case in making a general finding on all the issues for the defendants, and not finding especially the facts necessary to a judgment, meets its answer in the. former decisions of this court. In Daggs v. Hoskins, 5 Ariz. 300, 52 Pac. 357, 358, in discussing the question of the necessity of specific findings of fact, we said: ‘‘A general finding for the plaintiff will not support a judgment in his favor. A different rule, however, is applied where there is a general finding for the defendant in an action, and a judgment dismissing the complaint. Our statute does not require that the findings of fact shall be special, but only requires that in the decisions of the court findings ■ of fact shall be separately stated from the conclusions of law. We hold that a general finding of the issues in favor of the. defendants sufficiently supports the judgment.” Again, in McGowan v. Sullivan, 5 Ariz. 334, 52 Pac. 986, we said: “It is urged as ground for reversal that the lower court failed to state its findings of fact and conclusions of law. The transcript shows a general finding upon the issues in favor of the defendant; and we have already held, in the case of Daggs v. Moslems, supra, that a judgment upon such finding is valid under the act of the legislature approved March 16, 1897.” In this case, although the trial court decreed that the property was the separate property of the defendants, yet the decree was based upon defensive matter of the defendants, and not upon affirmative matter in a cross-complaint. The title to the property was already in the name of the defendants, where it would have to remain, under the operation of law, until removed therefrom by a decree taking the title, from the defendants, and placing it in the plaintiff. No decree that it remain there was necessary.
Sloan, J., and Doan, J., concur.