147 N.W. 643 | N.D. | 1914
This is an appeal from an order made by Judge S. L. Nuchols on April 12, 1912, -while acting as special judge of the tenth judicial district, declining and refusing defendant’s demand for a trial of the action. The order reads as follows:
“It is hereby ordered that the motion of the defendant and his demand for a trial be, and they hereby are, overruled and denied upon the sole and only ground that the action is not pending for trial, but that the issues involved therein have been merged in a final judgment, which judgment remains unvacated and unreversed, and the order of his Honor, Judge Winchester, of date the 14th day of January, 1911, assuming to grant a new trial hereof, is void and of no force and effect.”
The facts essential to a complete understanding of the questions for decision are stated in appellant’s brief in substance as follows:
The action was brought in 1906, to quiet title to certain land in Billings county. The answer alleges by way of defense a contract of purchase of the land, and a partial payment thereon by note. The
By chapter 162, LaAvs 1907, the tenth judicial district was formed, and Stark county, among others, Avas transferred to it; and at the fall election of that year Honorable W. O. Crawford was elected the judge of that district.
On March 3, 1909, J. A. Miller, one of the attorneys for the defendant, made an affidavit for extension of time to settle a bill of exceptions and make a motion for new trial. The reason for asking for this stay was that the original papers and transcript of the evidence could not be found. Hpon this affidavit an order was made by Judge Crawford on March 3, 1909, as prayed for. Various other stays were granted, and finally, it being shown that the defendant Avas utterly unable to prepare a statement of the case, although he had made inquiry of the plaintiff’s attorneys, Judge 'Winchester, the clerk of court, and the court stenographer, and had made trips to Medora and A'arious places in Montana, Judge Crawford, on December 5, 1910, made an order that “all further proceedings in the matter be had before the Honorable W. FI. Winchester, judge of the sixth judicial district, and the judge before whom this case was originally tried,” because as (the order recited), “he (Judge Crawford) was not present at the trial of the action, and knows nothing of the evidence there adduced, he is not in a position to satisfactorily settle the statement of case.”
Thereafter and on January 11, 1911, on an ex parte motion and on the affidavit of L. A. Simpson, one of the attorneys for the plaintiff, Judge CraAvford revoked the order of December 5, 1910, transferring the case to Judge Winchester, reciting as a ground “that said order inadvertently by the court recited statements not in accordance with the record in said case.”
Pursuant to the order of December 5, 1910, an ex parte motion
Thereupon a motion was made before Judge Winchester by the plaintiff’s attorneys, upon notice and order to show cause, to vacate the order granting new trial. This motion was heard on February 15, 1911, and denied.
Thereafter the case came up for new trial before Judge Crawford, who requested in writing that Judge Nuchols, of the twelfth judicial district, preside at the trial and hear all motions, etc. On April 12, 1912, the defendant moved the case for trial, which motion was opposed by the plaintiff. After argument of counsel, and on the same day, Judge Nuchols made the order complained of.
From the foregoing statement of facts it is, at the outset, apparent that the order of Judge Winchester vacating the judgment theretofore entered by him, and granting a new trial, was equitable and just, as it afforded defendant an opportunity to procure the necessary record upon which his right to a trial de novo in this court can be exercised. It merely granted or attempted to grant, by motion in the action, the relief to which defendant would no doubt otherwise have been clearly entitled in an action in equity. Bruegger v. Cartier, 20 N. D. 72, 126 N. W. 491; Henrichsen v. Smith, 29 Or. 475, 42 Pac. 486, 44 Pac. 496; 29 Cyc. 874. Such order ought, therefore, to be given force and effect, unless it clearly appears that the same was a nullity for lack of jurisdiction to make it.
In making the order from which this appeal is prosecuted, Judge Nuchols held that the Winchester order was absolutely void. The particular grounds upon which the learned court deemed such order to be void are recited in his order, but we are unable. to discover any sound reason for such holding. Conceding that the order of Judge Crawford, made on January 11, 1911, purporting to vacate his order of December 5, 1911, transferring jurisdiction of the cause to Judge Winchester, was authorized in law and therefore effective, still we would be confronted with a situation wherein a judge in an adjoining district assumed to exercise jurisdiction in a cause pending in another district, and, concededly, his acts would not be void, but merely
The respondent cites Parrott v. Hot Springs, 9 S. D. 202, 68 N. W. 329, and Williams v. Chicago & N. W. R. Co. 11 S. D. 463, 78 N. W. 949, but these were cases of direct attack on the order by appeals.
Conceding, for the sake of argument, that jurisdiction to entertain or decide a motion for new trial terminates upon the expiration of one year from the date of notice of entry of judgment (although see King v. Hanson, 13 N. D. 85, 99 N. W. 1085, and Williams v. Fairmount School Dist. 21 N. D. 198, 129 N. W. 1027) yet whether facts exist in a particular case showing such lapse of time must, of necessity, be determined judicially when raised, and such determination, whether right or wrong, is a finality unless directly attacked. In the case at bar Judge Winchester necessarily passed on this question, both in granting the ex parte order vacating the judgment and granting a new trial, and also in later denying plaintiff’s motion to vacate his prior order, one of the grounds urged on such motion being loss of jurisdiction by lapse of time. No attack on these rulings was made by plaintiff other than the collateral attack by the objection, interposed before
The order is reversed and the cause remanded for further proceedings.