Condemnation in fee for construction of Santa Monica Freeway. Defendant Lydia Mascotti is owner of property designated as Parcel 3 in the complaint. She appeals from the interlocutory and final judgments rendered after a third trial of the case as to her parcel.
The action was filed and summons issued on July 30, 1957, and the first trial was had within one year from that date, hence the valuation date used in said trial was the date of filing. Defendant’s answer, filed in propria persona, raised the issue of a taking for private use, did so in such manner that the judge and counsel understood her contention and tried the case upon the theory that she was claiming that the State was taking part of her Parcel 3 exclusively for private use, namely, leasing a portion of the condemned *774 parcel to a private person for an auto park. She was represented by counsel at the trial. The court sustained objections to defendant's proffered evidence in support of her plea, holding that the resolution of the California Highway Commission authorizing the condemnation was conclusive and the trial of the issue of private use was thereby precluded.
Defendant Mascotti appealed and the judgment was reversed in
People
v.
Nahabedian,
The reversal was in this form: "The judgment is reversed and the cause remanded for a new trial”; this was general and opened all issues for retrial. (4 Cal.Jur.2d § 666, p. 551.)
Before the second trial defendant, through an attorney, filed a second amended and supplemental answer alleging that the north half of her property was being taken for private use and that the commission was abusing its discretion and acting in bad faith. The case came on for a second trial on April 13, 1960. A division of this court had decided on April 7, 1960,
People
v.
Murata
(Cal.App.)
The notice of motion was that of the People and sought a new trial “upon the issue of the compensation awarded for the taking of Parcel 3” upon the grounds of excessive damages, insufficiency of the evidence, verdict against law and error in law occurring at the trial. It is now contended by respondent that this was a motion for retrial of a single issue and the judge could not go beyond the motion—specifically that he could not grant a new trial generally. The rule is that the court is confined to the scope of the notice in granting a new trial
(Van Ostrum
v.
State of California,
“This question is analogous to that presented when an appeal is taken from only a part of a judgment. To simplify litigation a party who is aggrieved by a judgment is ordinarily entitled to limit his appeal to the parts thereof with which he is dissatisfied. Similarly, when he is seeking relief *777 in the trial court by way of a new trial, he ordinarily may seek a retrial only of the issues on which the decision has been adverse to him. In either case, however, situations may arise where the issues are so interwoven that a partial retrial would be unfair to the other party. When, as in the present ease, for instance, the jury has, by compromising the issues of liability and damages, inextricably interwoven those issues, a retrial of the damages issue alone based on the erroneous assumption that defendant’s liability has been determined would be extremely unjust to him. A situation is thus presented where the plaintiff has been aggrieved, but the specific relief he seeks may not be granted without doing an injustice to the defendant. Since the relief requested may not be granted, the trial court, if the issue is presented by motion for a limited new trial, or the appellate court, if the issue is presented by a partial appeal, must do one of two things. It must either deny all relief, or order a new trial on both issues. In the case of partial appeals it is settled that the court may review as much of the judgment as is necessary to give the appellant the relief he seeks even though it is necessary to reverse parts of the judgment with which he has no quarrel and from which neither party has appealed. . . . Logically the same rule should govern the trial court when passing on a motion for a limited new trial. ’ ’
As pointed out in
Hamasaki, supra,
this rule pertaining to new trials is but the counterpart of the one governing appeal from a portion of a judgment. That can be done properly only when the issue is clearly severable and if attempted in disregard of this rule may result in a review of the entire judgment. (See
M. H. Golden Constr. Co.
v.
El Centro Properties,
The question of whether the order granting the new trial was general or limited to the issue of compensation as requested by plaintiff turns upon the problem of severability of the issues. Both the question of a taking for private use and that of compensation for the taking were canvassed at this second trial and the court made this finding: "The court finds that the use and purposes for which said parcel of real property is sought to be condemned is a public use authorized by law, to wit, for a State highway for freeway purposes, and that the taking of said real property in fee simple absolute for said purposes was and is necessary to such public use and purposes.” Both questions, extent of taking and compensation to be made, were tried and decided, one by the judge and the other by the jury. The issue of public use had been decided by the judge and there were no circumstances present (such as a compromise verdict of a jury) to indicate that a partial retrial would be unfair to the opposing party. It having been thus determined that all of appellant’s property was being taken for public use, the question of compensation became a severable one, just like the issues of liability and damages in the ordinary personal injury case. The plaintiff having asked for a new trial limited to compensation and defendant having made no motion for a new trial, the court granted “plaintiff's motion” on the ground of insufficiency of the evidence. The judge, following the opinion of the District Court of Appeal in
People
v.
Murata, supra,
(Cal.App.)
At the third trial, beginning on January 24, 1961, the trial judge ruled: “I find by going through this file that Judge Crum made a written finding on the issue of public use, and the motion for a new trial was made on the issue of evaluation, compensation. So it will be the ruling of this Court that insofar as no motion for a new trial or appeal was made on the issue of public use, that that is now final and that the motion for new trial on compensation and .evaluation was confined to that issue only. The Court will further find, in accordance with the Murata case, that the correct date of evaluation for us to consider at this time will be the date of issuance of the original summons.” Judge Sheldon did not err in adopting July 30, 1957, as the valuation date. The law was established to that effect by the Supreme Court’s decision in the Murata case. True, the findings made upon the second trial declare April 13, 1960, to be the correct valuation date, but that finding was vacated by the order granting a new trial upon the issue of compensation and the question was thus thrown open.
The judgments are affirmed.
Fox, P. J., and Herndon, J., concurred.
Appellant’s petition for a rehearing was denied September 13, 1962, and the following opinion was then rendered:
Appellant’s petition for rehearing raises for the first time the claim that “the Sheldon judgment is erroneous in that it violates the constitutional provisions requiring payment of just compensation,” because “it purports to limit interest upon the principal award to the date of entry of the Sheldon judgment [R. 60] as distinct from the date of payment to or deposit for the appellant ‘without strings’ so that she could receive it without waiving her right to appeal upon the grounds heretofore appealed from.”
The point must be deemed waived by failure to present it in the briefs. “Counsel are not permitted to argue their cases in a piecemeal fashion and points not previously argued will not be considered where raised for the first time on petition for rehearing.
(Epperson
v.
Rosemond,
Petition for rehearing denied.
Fox, P. J., and Herndon, J., concurred.
Appellant’s petition for a hearing by the Supreme Court was denied October 10,1962.
Notes
1The cited case of
People
v.
Lagiss,
