21 P.2d 998 | Cal. Ct. App. | 1933
Upon the application of petitioner, a writ of review was issued by the Supreme Court and made returnable before this court. It appears that the petitioner brought an action in the respondent court seeking to recover some $30,000 as damages for personal injuries alleged to have been caused by the negligence of the defendants in the action. The answer of the defendants denied negligence on their part and alleged contributory negligence on the part of the plaintiff. A jury returned a verdict in favor of the petitioner in the sum of $4,000 and judgment was entered accordingly. In due course the petitioner filed notice of intention to move "for a new trial of said action on part of the issues only, to-wit: on the issue of damages, upon the following grounds and for the following cause materially affecting the substantial rights of said plaintiff, to-wit: Insufficiency of the evidence to justify the verdict". It fully appears that no other notice of intention to move for a new trial was given by any of the parties to said action and that no other motion for a new trial was made or attempted to be made. After hearing petitioner's motion, as thus limited by the notice of intention, the court denied the same but granted a new trial upon all of the issues, the order made being as follows:
"The plaintiff's motion for a new trial upon the sole issue of damages is hereby denied, but a new trial is hereby granted as to all of the issues raised by the pleadings upon *700 the ground of the insufficiency of the evidence to sustain the verdict."
This proceeding seeks to annul that portion of this order granting a new trial as to all of the issues, as being void and one which the court had no jurisdiction to make.
[1] The respondents earnestly contend that the court had power to make the order complained of, upon its own motion, and cites many cases from other jurisdictions. It was pointed out inDiamond v. Superior Court,
From these and other authorities which might be mentioned, it seems to be clearly established that since the repeal in 1915 of the former section
[2] This brings us to the question whether, under the 1929 amendment to section
Prior to the amendment of section
"The verdict may be vacated and any other decision may be modified or vacated, in whole or in part, and a new or further trial granted on all or part of the issues, on the application of the party aggrieved, . . ."
Theretofore the "application of the party aggrieved" had been held essential to give the court jurisdiction to make an order for a new trial. The amendment made no change in this situation, the only change being to provide that a verdict may be vacated in whole or in part and that a new or further trial may be granted on all or part of the issues. The amendment was not necessary to enable a court to grant a new trial upon one issue when a new trial in general had been applied for, as such procedure had long been upheld. It would seem that the only reasonable purpose of the amendment was to meet the suggestion made by the Supreme Court in refusing a hearing in Donnatin v. Union Hardware Metal Co., supra, and to permit a party to avail himself of the *702 right to apply for a new trial upon part of the issues alone without reopening the whole case. And as the power of the court to act had previously been dependent upon the making of an application by the party aggrieved, the statutory right to make a restricted application clearly implies, in carrying out the purpose of the amendment, a corresponding limitation upon the order that might be made in connection therewith and based thereon.
There is a wide difference between a court giving a party something less than asked for, but included therein, and giving him something entirely apart from the thing asked for. The phrase "on the application of the party aggrieved" applies to the new provisions of the amended section as well as to the old. As amended, the section gives a party the right to apply for a new trial upon part of the issues instead of applying for a new trial in general, as before. It is the obvious purpose of the amendment to permit this very thing and the benefit of the amendment would be largely lost if, by so applying, a party opened the door to the same jurisdiction that would have been formerly conferred by a general application for a new trial on all of the issues. In our opinion, the statute as amended means that a party may make application for a new trial upon all of the issues or upon one or more issues alone and that the court may pass upon the application and grant a new trial, either as a whole or in part, in accordance with the foundation laid by the application. No injustice can result to the opposing party, since he has the opportunity to himself ask for a new trial upon all of the issues. And if the court feels that the issues are so intermingled and blended that the trial of one or more of them separately might work an injustice, the partial new trial asked for may be denied and the case left in a position sufficiently satisfactory to the other party that he has not sought a new trial.
We conclude that under the circumstances here appearing the court was without authority to do more than to act upon the motion as made, and to grant or refuse a new trial upon the one issue referred to.
[3] The respondent filed a motion to dismiss this proceeding upon the ground that the order complained of was appealable and that certiorari will not lie. The court made *703
an order upon the matter before it and thereafter made a further order, the latter being the only one that is here attacked. If our views upon the main questions presented are correct, the court had jurisdiction only to make its ruling upon the petitioner's motion for a new trial on one issue alone. Having done this, its further order was not only void (Bloomquist v.Haley,
The respondents' motion to dismiss this proceeding is denied and that portion of the trial court's order granting a new trial on all of the issues is annulled.
Marks, J., and Jennings, J., concurred.