172 P. 699 | Utah | 1918
The defendants have appealed from a judgment entered against them by the district court of Salt Lake County. The
The record filed in this court shows that the judgment against the defendants was duly entered on January 15, 1916, and that notice of the entry of judgment was served on defendants ’ counsel the same day; that no motion for a new trial was served and filed until the 31st day of July, 1916, or 6 months and 16 days after the entry of judgment; that the notice of appeal was served and filed June 1, 1917, and the appeal was perfected on the 6th day of that month. The record also shows that the district judge from time to time granted the defendants extensions of time within which to serve and file their motion for a new trial, and that the last extension granted expired on the 31st day of July, 1916, the day on which the motion for a new trial was served and filed.
Plaintiff’s counsel insists that, inasmuch as, under our statute (Comp. Laws 1907, section 3301), an appeal may only “be taken within six months from the entry of the judgment,” and that section 3329 prohibits the extension of the time within which an appeal may be taken, the serving and filing of a motion for a new trial more than 6 months after the entry of judgment is of no force or effect. The Territorial Supreme Court of Utah, in Brough v. Mighell, 6 Utah, 317, 23 Pac. 673, held that the time within which an appeal must be taken cannot be extended, and this court, in Anderson v. Halthusen, etc., Co., 30 Utah, 31, 83 Pac. 560, held that the time for appeal may not be extended by stipulation. In Felt v. Cook, 31 Utah, 299, 87 Pac. 1092, this court also held that an application to file a motion for a new trial upon the ground of excusable neglect must, under section 3005, be made within 6 months after entry of judgment or it comes too late. Upon the other hand, it has frequently been held by this court, and such has become the settled practice, that the district court or the district judge may grant extensions of time within which to serve
As already pointed out, the time within which an appeal may be taken is jurisdictional, and may not be extended by agreement or otherwise. The only means by which the time within which a judgment becomes final for the purposes of an appeal may be suspended is by serving and filing a motion for a new trial as before stated. The question, therefore, is, when must such a motion be served and filed in order to have the effect of extending the time for appeal? Can that be done within any time that the district court, or a judge thereof, may fix ? May the court, or judge, extend the time to file a motion for a new trial indefinitely, or is there a limit beyond which the time may not be extended? If there is no limit, then the district court, or the judge, has power to extend the time so that an appeal need not be perfected for years after the judgment is entered. True, the district court, after the motion for a new trial is filed and pending, may withhold decision, and thus may likewise retard an appeal. If the district court, however, unreasonably withholds a decision upon a motion duly filed, the parties to the action are not without
We remark that while in this opinion we have used the term “motion for a new trial” instead of the statutory term “notice of motion for a new trial, ’ ’ we did so for convenience merely, and not for the purpose of making any distinction between the two terms.
We are of the opinion, therefore, that in order to suspend the time within which an appeal must be taken the party intending to file a motion for a new trial must serve and file the same before the expiration of the six months mentioned in section 3301, and that neither the district court nor the judge thereof has the power or authority to grant an extension of time beyond the 6-month period aforesaid. The motion for a new trial in this ease, not having been filed within such period of time, was impotent to arrest the finality of the judgment, and hence the appeal in this case was not taken within the time provided by our statute.
The motion to dismiss the appeal should therefore be, and it accordingly is, granted, and the appeal is dismissed, at the defendants’ costs.