98 P. 204 | Kan. | 1908
This action was brought by the defendant in error against the railway company to recover damages for personal injuries. Issues were joined and a trial was had before a jury in January, 1906, in the district court of Coffey county. After the plaintiff had introduced his evidence the defendant demurred thereto. The demurrer was sustained, and the jury dis
The bill of exceptions brought up does not disclose the evidence, if any, upon which the final action of the court was based. The court may have concluded, on reconsideration thereof, that it had erred in sustaining the demurrer to plaintiff’s evidence, or that it had erred in denying the plaintiff’s motion for a new trial. As to the reason which actuated the court we are left only to conjecture. That the court had full power during the term at which it was rendered to vacate the judgment, if it considered an injustice had been done' is well established by the decisions of this and other courts. And if the court concluded that it had erroneously denied the motion for a new trial it could have vacated the order as well as the judgment, and thereupon it could have allowed the plaintiff’s motion to dismiss the action without prejudice. This would, perhaps, have been the more orderly method of procedure. The same result, however, was attained.
It is sufficient to say that the bill of exceptions brought here does not affirmatively show error in the proceedings, and the orders of the court are- therefore affirmed.