Clifford v. Latham
Clifford v. Latham
Opinion of the Court
On the facts found at the trial of this action, involving certain Paulk county land, to which the defendant had obtained title, the court declared an involuntary trust thereof in favor of plaintiff, and decreed “that the defendant, D. H. Latham, make, execute, acknowledge, and deliver to the plaintiff herein a good and sufficient special warranty deed, conveying to plaintiff, Edwin C. Clifford, the said northwest quarter of section twenty-six in township one hundred and twenty north, of range sixty seven west of the fifth principal meridian, and that said deed contain covenants against any act done, suffered, or performed by defendant, or any one
It being discretionary to grant or refuse a motion for a new trial based upon the insufficiency of the evidence, the action of the trial court, where the testimony is conflicting, as in this case, must be affirmed on appeal unless there is an abuse of judicial discretion, and none is disclosed by the record before us. It has been thus determined so frequently by this court that reference to the cases is unnecessary, and “a clearer case is required to authorize the reversal of an order granting a motion for a new trial than is required to reverse an order overruling such motion.” Grant v. Grant, 6 S. D. 147, 60 N. W. 748.
The order appealed from is affirmed.
Reference
- Cited By
- 3 cases
- Status
- Published
- Syllabus
- Where, in a suit against an attorney to declare a resulting trust in certain land purchased by the attorney, complainant testified that he was the owner of a tax deed on the premises, and employed the attorney to procure for him the outstanding title, which the attorney afterwards obtained for himself, hut he testified that he had been regularly retained to protect the adverse interests, and to sue to set aside complainant’s tax deed, and unequivocally denied that he was ever employed by complainant, an order granting defendant a new trial after an adverse decree was not such an abuse of discretion as justified a reversal thereof on appeal.