102 P. 145 | Mont. | 1909
delivered the opinion of the court.
The plaintiff appeals from an order of the district court of Silver Bow county granting the defendant a new trial. The defendant’s bill of exceptions on this motion for a new trial is not in the record, and although the plaintiff, at the time the order granting the new trial was made, was given thirty days in which to prepare and serve a bill of exceptions, it does not appear that advantage was ever taken of the leave granted; so
The grounds of plaintiff’s objections to the settlement of the bill of exceptions, and of his contention in this court, are thus stated in the brief of his counsel: ‘ ‘ The only question presented to this court on appeal is whether the lower court had the right, or jurisdiction, at the time, to grant defendant (respondent) a new trial, and that question depends on whether Senate Bill No. 24, attempted to be passed by the eighth session of the legislature of the state of Montana, in 1903, wherein it was attempted to give the court power to extend the time ninety days, instead of thirty days, as provided by section 1897 of the Code of Civil Procedure, within which a party may serve and file a bill of exceptions and statement on motion for a new trial (Session Laws 1903, p. 37),” was passed in accordance with constitutional requirements. “Appellant’s contention is that said Senate Bill is not a valid law, because of a failure of the said legislature to comply with the mandatory requirements of the Constitution of the state of Montana in passing it.” Section 1897, Code of Civil
The district court has general jurisdiction to grant new trials, and the action of that court is presumed to be regular. The order granting a new trial is general in terms, simply reciting: “This day the motion of the defendant for a new trial is granted.” Under the law relating to motions for new trials in foree at the date of the proceedings, such motion could be made and granted on the minutes of the court. (Revised Codes, sec. 6795.) As the notice of intention to move for a new trial recited that the motion would be made on the minutes of the court, and there is nothing to indicate that the order was not based upon the minutes, we cannot say that the court acted entirely upon the bill of exceptions. It may be that the bill was not considered by the district court, but that the order was based entirely on what was disclosed by the minutes. When an application for a new trial is made on the minutes of the court, in the absence of a bill of exceptions, the trial court is presumed to have considered all of the pleadings, records, minute entries, and the evidence offered at the trial, and to have determined the motion on the case thus presented. (State ex rel. Cohn v. District Court, 38 Mont. 119, 99 Pac. 139.)
As the burden is on the appellant to show that the district court was not warranted in granting the motion for a new trial, either on the bill of exceptions or the minutes of the court, and he has not done so, the order must be affirmed.
Affirmed.