105 P. 955 | Cal. | 1909
Action for divorce. The complaint, filed by the wife, was based on the ground of extreme cruelty. The husband answered, denying the charges, and filed a cross-complaint in which he set up three grounds for divorce — *653 extreme cruelty, desertion, and adultery. Upon the trial, the court found in favor of the charge of adultery, and granted an interlocutory decree of divorce in favor of the husband as cross-complainant. The wife's motion for a new trial was denied, and she appeals from the order denying her said motion. She also appeals from a subsequent order denying her motion for attorney's fees and costs on appeal. There is no appeal from the judgment.
The appellant seeks, on her appeal from the order denying a new trial, to have reviewed the action of the court below in overruling her demurrer to the cross-complaint. It is urged that the charge of adultery is not sufficiently specific in its designation of the person with whom the act was claimed to have been committed. We do not agree with this contention, but even if we did, the point would not be available to appellant on an appeal from an order denying a new trial. "Upon an appeal from an order granting a new trial, only such matters can be considered as are made grounds upon which the superior court is authorized to grant or deny the motion. Neither the sufficiency of a pleading nor the action of the superior court upon a demurrer thereto, or upon a motion to strike out the pleading or any portion thereof, can be considered." (Green v. Duvergey,
It appears that when the cause was called for trial, the plaintiff, through her attorney, objected to proceeding on the ground that she was without means to obtain witnesses, by reason of the refusal of the court, before the time of trial, to grant her applications for orders directing the defendant to furnish her with the necessary money with which to subpœna witnesses. The objection was overruled, and the plaintiff then made the point that the issues arising on the cross-complaint and the answer thereto should first be tried. The court ruled in favor of this contention, whereupon plaintiff objected to going to trial on the cross-complaint, on the ground that she was unable to make her defense for the same reasons as those which prevented her making out a case under her complaint. This objection was also overruled. Exceptions to both rulings were noted. The cross-complainant offered evidence in support of the charge of adultery, and the plaintiff and another *654 witness testified in opposition. The court stated that it thought the defendant entitled to a divorce on the ground of adultery. The defendant abandoned the other grounds of his cross-complaint and the court called upon plaintiff's counsel to proceed with his case on the original complaint. This he declined to do, standing upon the objections theretofore made. Although the plaintiff was present, and that fact emphasized by the court, the attorney refused to call her or to proceed. Thereupon the court, on motion of the defendant, dismissed plaintiff's action, and granted the defendant judgment on the third cause of action (i.e., adultery), set up in his cross-complaint.
The evidence in support of the defendant's cross-complaint is not set forth, and its sufficiency to sustain the finding is not questioned. The appellant relies for reversal upon the action of the court in refusing to postpone the trial upon her statement that she was unable, by reason of prior rulings of the court, to procure witnesses. This contention involves, necessarily, an inquiry into the correctness of those prior rulings. The orders denying the plaintiff's applications for costs were themselves appealable orders (Sharon v. Sharon,
It follows that the court acted properly in compelling the parties to go to trial and in dismissing plaintiff's case upon her refusal to offer any testimony in support of her complaint. (Code Civ. Proc., sec. 581.)
Of the appeal from the order refusing to require defendant to pay plaintiff's expenses of appeal, it is sufficient to say that this, too, is a matter resting in the sound discretion of the trial court (Gay v. Gay,
The orders appealed from are affirmed.
Shaw, J., and Angellotti, J., concurred. *657