61 P. 90 | Cal. | 1900
The cause was once here before and is reported in Rauer v. Fay,
Plaintiff in his specifications of particulars pointed out several averments of the complaint which, as is claimed, in fact were fully supported by the evidence, but which the court found to be untrue. At the former trial, when the contract was offered in evidence it was objected to, but the objection was overruled. The ruling was held to be error on appeal, for the reasons above stated, and that it should have been excluded. At the last trial the contract was admitted in evidence without objection, and witnesses were permitted, without objection, to state the work performed pursuant to the contract.
Defendant denied specifically the allegations of the complaint and pleaded, by way of a second defense, a release and full acquittance, and also a third defense based upon certain ordinances of the city which required a permit from the superintendent of streets, based upon a contract signed by three-fourths of the property owners, on the portion of the street where the work was proposed to be done. There is no specification of insufficiency of evidence to sustain the last two affirmative defenses, and appellant claims that as to these the statement must be disregarded (citing Code Civ. Proc., sec. 659); and it is contended that if either of these defenses is good the judgment should stand and the new trial should have been denied.
It is well settled that the party moving for a new trial upon a statement, for insufficiency of the evidence, must point out the particulars wherein the evidence is insufficient, and that, failing to do so, the statement relating to the alleged insufficiency must be disregarded. Upon an appeal from an order denying a new trial this court cannot consider the insufficiency of either the complaint or of the findings to support the judgment. (Brison v. Brison,
As to the alleged release the court said in the former appeal: "The mere fact that the plaintiff was not aware of this release at the time he took an assignment of the contract is of no moment. He must be deemed to have taken such contract cum onere, subject only to the duty of defendant to notify him of any conditions not specified in the contract itself, such as its full execution, payment thereunder, etc." This defense was therefore sufficiently pleaded, and if supported by evidence would constitute a complete defense to the action. The court found the allegations of the answer to be true. We cannot see but that it justified the judgment in favor of defendant, even if it be admitted that the allegations of the complaint are true and were erroneously found to be untrue. With this finding before the trial court, unassailed for insufficiency of the evidence to support it, the court had no discretion to grant a new trial. A failure to specify insufficiency of the evidence is an admission that it is sufficient. The reason *527 of the rule is obvious. The trial court is entitled to have the insufficiency of the evidence pointed out in order that it may intelligently pass upon it, and in order also that the statement may be amended, if necessary, to conform to the evidence. And this court will not consider the statement unless such specification is made, for the reason that it can take notice only of what was first presented to the lower court. If plaintiff had desired to challenge the findings as to defendant's special defenses, it was his duty to present specifications of insufficiency of the evidence to support them. Having failed to do so, we cannot consider the evidence to see whether it does or does not support such defenses. It is not necessary to inquire whether the third defense was sufficient, as the judgment may rest upon the second defense.
It is advised that the order be reversed.
Gray, C., and Haynes, C., concurred.
For the reasons given in the foregoing opinion the order is reversed. Harrison, J., Van Dyke, J., Garoutte, J.