Coffey v. Grand Council
Coffey v. Grand Council
Opinion of the Court
This is an application for a writ of mandate to compel Hon. J. P. Hoge, a judge of the superior court, to settle a bill of exceptions in the case of Coffey v. The Grand Council of the Young Men’s Institute, and should be entitled Grand Council v. Hoge, Judge.
On the petitioner’s own showing, we think it is not entitled to the writ prayed for.
After judgment in the court below, in favor of the plaintiff, the defendant in due time served its notice of intention to move for a new trial and proposed statement. Proposed amendments were served January 30,
The petitioner alleges that its counsel was engaged in causes pending in other departments of the superior court, and for that reason overlooked the hour for which the settlement of the statement had been fixed. If there is any power to relieve a party from the effect of such an inadvertence, it is in the court below, not here. The matter was presented to the judge, and the petition shows that the petitioner was given repeated hearings on its application, all parties being present. As stated before, if there was any power anywhere to relieve the petitioner from its default, and if good cause could be shown in that behalf, the court below was the proper tribunal to determine the matter, and we must assume that it did not abuse its discretion on the showing made by the parties.
Furthermore, it appears that counsel for the petitioner
Counsel for petitioner asked at the hearing to be allowed to amend the petition, so as to set out the conversation between himself and the judge which occurred at two o’clock, February 10th, as fully as it is set out in his affidavit in opposition to the motion made in Department One of this court to dismiss the appeal. If the petition can be amended in any case after an alternate writ has been issued, and the respondent has appeared and answered the same, it would be useless to allow it in this case. We have looked into the affidavit referred to, and there is nothing there alleged which would have any material bearing on the question before us.
No copy of the petition or of the writ was served on the plaintiff, and respondent has moved to dismiss on that ground. Buie 28 requires the petitioner to serve copies on the party in interest. This would, of itself, be sufficient ground for dismissing the petition, no offer having been made to comply with the rule.
The demurrer is sustained, without leave to amend, and the alternate writ is discharged.
Works, J., Sharpstein, J., and McFarland, J., concurred,
Rehearing denied.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.