Broder v. Superior Court
Broder v. Superior Court
Opinion of the Court
Application for writ of mandate.
In Broder v. Conklin, 98 Cal. 360, the order of the superior court of Mono county, setting aside a judgment that had been entered on the judgment book of that court in pursuance of certain findings of fact and conclusions of law previously filed therein, was affirmed, and after the remittitur had been filed in the court below the petitioners herein made a motion before that
A judgment is the final determination of the rights of the parties in an action, and when the action is tried by the court, cannot be entered until after a decision of the cause has been rendered; hence a writ of mandate will not be granted to compel a court to enter a judgment in a cause until after the court has tried the cause and rendered its decision. So long as any judicial act remains to be performed before the decision can be made, the cause has not been tried, and a judgment cannot be entered. While the cause remains undetermined the court before which it is pending cannot be compelled to try it in any particular mode, or to make any special order for the mode in which it is to be tried. The action of the court may be reviewed upon appeal, but cannot be controlled or supervised by a previous direction of this court. While the cause remains undecided the trial court is not concluded by any ruling or order that it may have made during the trial, or by any conclusion which it may have reached upon a controverted question of fact. It may change its ruling whereby evidence has been excluded or received and allow such evidence, and make a ruling with reference thereto according to its subsequent view; it may set aside the submission of the cause and allow additional evidence upon one or all of the issues in the case, even if it has indicated or formulated its conclusion upon the evidence already received; it may set aside an order of reference to try an issue and try the issue itself; or it may vacate any other interloputory order made in the progress of the trial. Until all the issues in the case have been decided, and the decision filed with the clerk, the cause remains in the breast of the judge, and during that
The application for the writ is denied.
McFarland, J., Garoutte, J., and Fitzgerald, J., concurred.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- R. C. BRODER v. THE SUPERIOR COURT OF MONO COUNTY, and W. H. VIRDEN, Judge
- Cited By
- 4 cases
- Status
- Published
- Syllabus
- Trial—Interlocutory Judgment—Findings—Completion of Trial-Discretion—Mandamus.-—Where a judge upon the filing of findings of fact and conclusions of law directed counsel to prepare an interlocutory judgment for the purpose of directing a referee to take an account between the parties, the rights of the parties are not finally determined, and the trial is not completed; and the mode of trial and the decision yet to be made are to be determined in the discretion of the trial court, which has the power to set aside the direction to prepare an interlocutory judgment, and to set the cause for trial, and it cannot be compelled by mandamus to enter a judgment and decree upon the findings of fact and conclusions of law.