137 P. 1178 | Okla. | 1914
In City of Ardmore v. Orr,
In Conwill v. Eldridge,
"Said statute, where the issues thereto are settled during the term of the court, makes a case triable at the same term of court only after the expiration of ten days from the date the issues are made up. City of Ardmore v. Orr, ante,
On September 28, 1910, the plaintiff in error, the Title Guaranty Trust Company, moved the court for a continuance of the cause, on the ground that the issues were not made up until that day, and that said cause did not stand for trial until ten days had elapsed therefrom. The motion then and there was overruled, and, over the protest of the plaintiff in error (defendant in the court below), it was required to proceed to trial. Under this status of the record, reversible error was committed.
Section 4791, Rev. Laws 1910, was in force when City ofArdmore v. Orr, supra, and Conwill v. Eldridge, supra, were decided. Said section was taken from the Code of Civil Procedure of Kansas, and in force there when the Supreme Court of Kansas held that it was error to compel the trial of a case on objection within ten days after the issues were made up. Section 6005, Rev. Laws 1910, does not apply to this case, as said section was first incorporated in Rev. Laws 1910, and under the act adopting the Code said section 6005 does not apply to pending causes.
It follows that the cause must be reversed and remanded, with instructions to grant a new trial.
All the Justices concur. *297