14 Nev. 63 | Nev. | 1879
By the Court,
There were appeals in this case from the judgment, from an order amending the judgment and from the order de-
It appears that after tbe commencement of tbe action Cardenas, one of tbe plaintiffs, died. Tbe fact having been suggested to tbe court, an order was made substituting D. L. Deal, public administrator of Lincoln county, as tbe personal representative of Cardenas. Thereupon tbe trial of tbe case proceeded, and plaintiffs obtained a verdict and judgment. Defendants moved for a new trial; the motion Avas overruled, and at tbe same time tbe court, of its own motion, ordered tbe judgment to be so amended as to run in favor of Louis Solomon, surviving partner of Cardenas. These are tbe orders appealed from.
Tbe order denying a neAv trial must be affirmed. After striking out tbe statement (see former opinion, 13 Nev. 276), there is nothing left to sustain tbe motion except tbe affidavits in relation to newly-discovered evidence, and they, unaided by tbe statement, fail to sIioav that tbe evidence so discovered is material to any of tbe issues raised by tbe pleadings. It Avould seem to have been intended to impeach some statements made by tbe plaintiff Solomon as a Avitness; but tbe record in tbe state in Avhick it is left fails to sboAv that Solomon gave any testimony in the case.
One of tlie affidavits tends to show that the court erred in finding the fact that Deal Avas the administrator of Cardenas. But tbe finding of the court as to that fact, and the verdict of the jury upon the issues submitted to them, are totally distinct, and an affidavit which tends to show that the court erred in its finding does not support a motion to set aside the verdict of the jury, which was the motion that Avas made. It is unnecessary in this case to decide whether the findings of the court, upon which the order of substitution was based, Avere the subject of a motion for a new trial. If they were, the motion should have specified those
It may perhaps be true that tlie effect of setting aside the order of substitution would Lave been to render a new trial necessary; but, however that may be, we are satisfied that an order for a new trial ought not to be made on a motion to set aside a verdict, merely because the court has erred in finding a fact in some preliminary proceeding in the case. The error of the court in such case can not be reviewed on that sort of a motion.
But the order of the court amending the judgment we think was erroneous. It was made long after the expiration of the term at which the judgment was rendered, and there was nothing in the record to show that Solomon and Cardenas were partners. .This order of the court is therefore reversed, and the judgment, as originally entered, affirmed.