11 Mont. 34 | Mont. | 1891
It appears that the respondent made objections to the time of serving the statement on motion for a new trial, and to the hearing of the motion. The court wholly refused to hear the motion. This was not the proper practice.
In Quivey v. Gambert, 32 Cal. 309, the court says: “A party moving for a new trial is entitled to a ruling upon his motion upon the basis upon which he presents it, in order that he may have and enjoy unembarrassed his right of appeal to this court. If his notice or statement has not been served or filed within time, that is a good reason why his motion should be denied when finally brought to hearing, but, under the method of procedure prescribed by the Code, it is not intended that the record upon which the motion is made may be first stricken out, and the motion then denied. Such a course is, in effect, a denial of any hearing upon the motion, and of an appeal to this court where an appeal is given.....If the notice and statement, or either of them, is not filed within time, he [respondent] may safely rely upon such facts as fatal to the motion, when brought to a hearing. If, however, as is generally the case, there is some doubt as to whether they are within time, and he does not desire to take any risk, he may propose amendments without waiving his right to object that they are not within time, by a simple preface that he does so without prejudice to his right to object at the hearing to the notice or statement upon those grounds. By so doing he waives nothing. On the contrary, he preserves all his rights in the premises. The court will then proceed to settle the statement, and at the hearing pass upon the objections so reserved. If the motion is denied, an appeal can be taken to this court, where the whole matter can be reviewed upon the record upon which the court below heard the motion. Such is the plain and obvious course prescribed by the statute, and no
In Lucas v. Marysville, 44 Cal. 212, we find: “In the case oí Quivey v. Gambert, it was held that it was not good practice to strike from the files a proposed statement on motion for a new trial, upon the ground that the right to move had been waived or lost, but that objections to the right oí the moving party to be heard upon the motion should be made at the hearing; and the rule in this respect, indicated in that case, has since then been followed in this court.”
Mr. Hayne, in commenting upon these cases, adds: “The objection that the proposed statement was not in time must be reserved before proposing amendments; if not, it is waived, and cannot afterwards be made, either on motion to strike out the statement or in any other manner. When reserved, the objection must (if not sustained at the settlement) be incorporated in the settled statement, together with the matter in its support. If it be not so incorporated, the presumption is that the proposed statement was in time, and that all the proceedings in its preparation were regular. This presumption is conclusive; for the statement, when certified and filed like other records, imports absolute verity, and cannot be contradicted or added to by affidavits upon a motion to dismiss, or in any other manner. The objection must therefore be apparent upon the face of the statement itself; and, if so apparent, it is manifest that it may be urged as a reason why the motion for a new trial should be denied, both in the lower court on the hearing of the motion, and in the Supreme Court on appeal from the order granting or refusing a new trial. This being the case, the inauguration of a separate line of proceedings by a separate motion to strike out the statement, or a motion to dismiss the motion for a new trial, is not only utterly useless, but is open to the very grave objection of involving two appeals before the motion for a new trial can get to the Supreme Court.”
If it be improper to strike out a statement, or to dismiss the motion for a new trial, and if the moving party is entitled to a hearing of his motion, the District Court in the case at bar certainly erred in refusing to hear appellant’s motion. The court should have heard any objections that the plaintiff might
It is therefore now ordered that the order of the District Court refusing to hear the motion for a new trial be reversed, and the case is remanded to that court, with directions to hear and determine that motion. There is also before us an appeal from the judgment. We will not pass upon that appeal until the District Court has opportunity to decide the motion for a new trial in accordance with the views above expressed.
■Reversed.