64 Cal. 92 | Cal. | 1883
In this case the only issue presented to the court for trial and determination was, whether a transaction which took place between the parties on the 26th of November, 1875, was intended .as a mortgage or a conditional sale. By its finding, filed pursuant to sections 632, 633, Code Civil Procedure,
It it contended, however, that the facts found did not warrant the conclusion drawn from them, and that the judgment entered thereon is erroneous. This contention is not founded upon the record of the case; for while the notice of motion for a new trial designated, as ground upon which the motion would be made, that “ the decision is against the law,” the specification of error is that “the court erred in rendering judgment for defendant, because the opinion of the court shows conclusively that the judgment should have been in favor of plaintiff.”
This specification concedes the facts as found by the court; and as the court found that the deed and agreement in writing, executed by the parties on the 26th of November, 1875 (which the plaintiff alleged were intended and understood as a mortgage to secure an indebtedness due by him to the defendant), “ were not intended or understood by the parties thereto, or either of them, to be, or to constitute a mortgage to secure any sum whatever, and the same did not constitute a mortgage,” it necessarily followed, as a conclusion of law, that the defendant Avas entitled to judgment, and the plaintiff was not. Judgment Avas therefore properly entered for the defendant, upon a conclusion of laAv legitimately draAvn from the facts found.
Where a conclusion of laAv is not legitimately drawn from a finding of facts, it may be revieAAred Avithout a bill of exceptions. (Thompson v. Hancock, 51 Cal. 110.) Such an error, if it exists, is apparent upon the judgment roll. But if the conclusion be legitimately draAvn from the facts as found, there is not, in that regard, any error apparent on the judgment roll; and if anything has occurred, on the trial and determination of a cause, Avhich shows that the decision by the court Avas erroneous, and is not made by IaAV part of the judgment roll, it must be brought into the record of the case by a bill of exceptions. If it is not made part of the record by a bill of exceptions, or by some other mode sanctioned by laAv, it is not revieAvable by the appellate court.
Judgment and order affirmed.
Boss, J., and McKinstby, J., concurred.
Hearing in Bank denied.