In an action by Johnson against the railroad company, a verdict was rendered for the plaintiff, on the 23d of November, 1876. Upon the same day, a consent order was passed by the court, as follows: “It is, on motion of counsel for defendant, and by consent of counsel for plaintiff, ordered that the defendant have thirty days after the adjournment of this court, to make and file motion for new trial, and a brief of the testimony approved by the court, in said ease, and that said motion be argued and decided in vacation; at such time as the court may appoint, provided counsel can, at the time, argue it without manifest inconvenience.” The court adjourned, for the term, bn the next day, that is, on the 24th of November. The evidence had been taken down by the stenographic reporter appointed by the court, whose notes could not be read by any of the defendant’s counsel. It required three days for the reporter to write them out. He completed this work within a few
On the day the verdict was rendered, the parties, by consent, cut loose from the strict law of new trials, and put themselves upon terms of their own choosing, the court, by an order entered on the minutes, giving its sanction to the compact. If the plaintiff had a right to require the brief of evidence, and the motion itself to be made out and filed at that term, he waived it. If the defendant had a right to postpone the filing of the motion and the brief until the
Judgment affirmed.
