139 P. 723 | Or. | 1914
delivered the opinion of the court.
This is an action to recover a balance of $330.60 and interest alleged to be due the defendant for goods and
The answer, after denying the allegations of the complaint, alleged that the defendant had, during the latter part of the year of 1911, purchased a large amount of cement from R. A. Hume, and from no one else, and that he had paid Hume in full for all cement purchased, and denied that he had ever purchased any cement or sacks from the plaintiff.
The reply denied the allegations of the answer. The evidence showed that the defendant had purchased through R. A. Hume or the R. A. Hume Company, in October, 1911, about the amount of cement that the plaintiff, by its complaint, claims to have sold to him, and it tends to prove that the defendant had, prior to
When the plaintiff rested its case in chief, the defendant filed and presented a motion for a judgment of nonsuit, for the reason, as the defendant claimed, that the plaintiff had shown, by its evidence, that the defendant had paid the plaintiff $1.40 more than the 664 barrels of cement, sacks and freight amounted to. The only witness that testified as to the value of the cement was R. A. Hume, a witness for the plaintiff. According to his evidence, the cement was worth $1.90 per barrel net, free of sacks. Figuring the cement at $1.90 per barrel, and the sacks and freight at what the plaintiff charged for them, and crediting the defendant with the payments that the plaintiff’s complaint admits were made, we find that the defendant had overpaid the plaintiff to the extent of $1.40.
There was no evidence as to the value of the cement excepting that of Mr. Hume referred to supra, and some sheets from the ledger of the R. A. Hume
The onus of proving the value of the cement was on the plaintiff, and the only witness, by it called, to prove that fact, testified that the cement was worth $1.90 per barrel. Charging the defendant for the cement at that rate, the plaintiff was paid for it $1.40 more than it was worth, and the plaintiff has no cause of action against him. The statements of account put in evidence by the plaintiff appear to be of little value, because no one testified that the cement was worth the price charged for it therein, but we do not find it necessary to set aside the judgment on that ground, or to decide that there was no evidence to support the findings of the court below in relation to the value of the cement, as the case will be decided upon another point.
•The plaintiff is a California corporation, and the allegations of the complaint as to its corporate character, and as to its right to do business in this state, were denied by the answer. The plaintiff failed to offer any evidence on these points, excepting as stated below. Several days after the court had rendered judgment for the plaintiff, the plaintiff petitioned the
The defendant contends that the trial court erred in opening up said cause and in permitting the plaintiff to introduce additional evidence several days after judgment had been given, and, also, that'the court erred,' after opening up the case and permitting the plaintiff to offer its additional evidence, in refusing to permit the defendant to introduce evidence as to his defense.
"When the plaintiff rested in the first instance, the defendant moved for a nonsuit, and this motion was denied. He did not then offer any proof of his defense ; but, after the court set aside the judgment and permitted the plaintiff to introduce additional evidence, the defendant asked to be permitted to offer evidence to support his defense. This the trial court refused.
This case was tried without a jury, and the court .granted judgment in favor of the plaintiff, but within the same term, and only a few days after the judgment was granted, and before it was entered, the trial court
In 1 Black, Judgments (2 ed.), Section 305, the author says, as to the power of a court to set aside or open up a judgment during the term at which it was entered:
“It is universally held that judgments are under the plenary control of the court which pronounces them during the entire term at which they are rendered, or entered of record, and they may, during such term, be set aside, vacated, modified or annulled by that court for cause shown. It is commonly said that judgments and decrees remain in the breast of the court during the term of their rendition; and, for the purpose of modifying or vacating them, the whole term may be considered as one day. This power may be exercised during the term on the court’s own proper motion, as well as on application by a party, when there is a manifest error or inadvertence to be corrected, and even, in proper cases, without notice to the parties. Its exercise is not prevented by the fact that a bill of exceptions has been taken or an appeal bond filed. It is a power inherent in all courts of general jurisdiction and is not dependent upon or derived from statutes. ’ ’
In 17 Am. & Eng. Ency. Law (2 ed.), pages 813, 814, the rule is stated thus:
“Every court has absolute control over its own judgments and decrees during the term at which they were rendered, and may therefore, at any time before the expiration of the term, in the exercise of its discretion, open, amend, correct, revise, vacate or supplement any judgment or decree rendered during such term. ’ ’
In San Francisco Breweries v. Schurtz, 104 Cal. 428 (38 Pac. 93), the court says:
“It appears from the bill of exceptions that nearly three weeks after the case was tried and submitted, and findings and decree of foreclosure were ordered, the appellant asked leave to introduce testimony show*508 ing that Schurtz’s lease had been broken and canceled; that the lessor had canceled the lease by bringing suit against him for rent due; and that from and after March 10, 1891, he had held the leased premises from month to month as a monthly tenant. The court refused to hear the offered testimony, and its ruling is assigned as error. The ruling was proper, and must be sustained for two reasons: (1) The application was addressed to the discretion of the court, * * and there is nothing tending to show an abuse of that discretion. So far as appears, the evidence might as well have been offered during the trial. (2) No issue was raised by the pleadings to which the offered evidence was relevant. ’ ’
The ruling in that case supports the contention that a court may, in its discretion, open up a case after a judgment has been pronounced and permit relevant evidence to be submitted.
In the ease of Leary v. Leary, 68 Wis., pages 666, 667 (32 N. W. 625), the court says:
“After having announced his opinion upon the evidence as it stood when the case was first submitted for his decision, he [the trial court] opened the case for further evidence, upon the motion of the plaintiff, that he had discovered other and material evidence for the plaintiff since the case had been submitted. As the case stood when it was submitted, there can be no doubt that the new evidence was material to the plaintiff’s case, and in an evenly balanced case might be decisive in his favor. We think the court was justified in opening the case for further evidence.”
In that ease the -cause had been finally submitted, and the court had announced its decision, and the court thereafter opened the case and permitted the plaintiff to produce additional material evidence, and the Supreme Court held that there was no error-in doing so.
This case was tried by the court without a jury, and the opening up of the case probably caused no great
It is contended that it was á matter within the sound discretion of the trial court to permit or refuse to allow the defendant to introduce evidence to substantiate his defense, and that the court’s decision in refusing to permit such evidence to be introduced is not reviewable. The court had gone to the verge of the law in opening up the case, after it had announced its decision, in order to-permit the plaintiff to introduce evidence material to its cause of action. Until the
In Osborne v. United States Bank, 9 Wheat. 866 (6 L. Ed. 204), Mr. Chief Justice Marshall says:
“'Judicial power, as contradistinguished from tbe power of tbe laws, has no existence. Courts are tbe mere instruments of tbe law, and can will nothing. When they are said to exercise a discretion, it is a mere legal discretion, a discretion to be exercised in discerning tbe course of prescribed law; and, wben that is discerned, it is tbe duty of tbe court to follow it. Judicial power is never exercised for tbe purpose of giving effect to tbe will of tbe judge; always for tbe purpose of giving effect to tbe will of tbe legislature; or, in other words, to tbe will of tbe law.”
Lord Camden (quoted in State v. Bernoudy, 36 Mo. 279) says:
“That tbe discretion of a judge is tbe law of tyrants; it is always unknown; it is different in different men; it is casual, and depends upon constitution, temper, and passion. In the best, it is oftentimes caprice; in tbe worst, it is every vice, folly, and passion to which human nature can be liable. ’ ’
In Murray v. Buell, 74 Wis. 19 (41 N. W. 1011, 1012), tbe court says:
“Tbe term ‘abuse of discretion,’ exercised in any case by tbe trial court, as used in tbe decisions of courts and in tbe books, implying, in common parlance, a bad motive or wrong purpose, is not tbe most appropriate. It is really a discretion exercised to an end or*511 purpose not justified by, and clearly against reason, and evidence.”
In Thompson v. Connell, 31 Or. 235 (48 Pac. 468, 65 Am. St. Rep. 818), tbe court says:
“True, the grant of sucb relief rests within the discretion of the court, but the discretion here spoken of is an ‘impartial discretion, guided and controlled in its exercise by fixed legal principles; * * a legal discretion to be exercised in conformity with the spirit of the law, and in a manner to subserve and not to defeat the ends of substantial justice,’ and for a manifest abuse thereof it is reviewable by an appellate jurisdiction.”
In Bailey v. Taaffe, 29 Cal. 424, the court says:
“The discretion intended, however, is not a capricious or arbitrary discretion, but an impartial discretion guided and controlled in its exercise by fixed legal principles. It is not a mental discretion, to be exercised ex gratia, but a legal discretion, to be exercised in conformity with the spirit of the law, and in a manner to subserve and not to impede or defeat the ends of substantial justice. ’ ’
In Volume 3 of Words and Phrases, page 2098, that work says:
“The term ‘discretion’ implies the absence of a hard-and-fast rule, and the establishment of a clearly defined rule would be the end of discretion; but the term is not a word for arbitrary will and unstable caprice. Judicial discretion should not be, as Lord Coke pronounced it, ‘a crooked cord,’ but rather, as Lord Mansfield defined it, ‘exercising the best of their judgment upon the occasion that calls for it.’ ”
The cases do not agree precisely in defining judicial discretion, or in stating the circumstances under which a ruling, resting in the discretion of the trial court, may be reviewed by an appellate court, but it is generally held that, where the trial court has abused its discretion, its action may be reversed upon appeal. It
In this case, the application of the plaintiff to have the case opened up, and for leave to submit additional proof, and that of the defendant to be permitted, after the plaintiff had submitted its additional proof, to submit his evidence to substantiate his defense, should be viewed together. The evidence which the plaintiff was permitted to put in was evidence that should have been introduced in its case in chief, and, as soon as it was in, all of the plaintiff’s evidence in chief was in. It had not all been put in until that was offered. "We hold that the court should have permitted the defendant, after the plaintiff’s evidence in chief was all in, as stated supra, to introduce his evidence to substantiate his defense, and that the refusal of the trial court to do so was unfair to the defendant and subversive of the principles of justice, and unjustly deprived the defendant of his right to make his defense, and that said ruling is reversible error.
The judgment of the court below is therefore reversed, and a new trial is ordered.
Reversed : New Trial Ordered.