Gorman v. Madden

South Dakota Supreme Court
Gorman v. Madden, 35 S.D. 265 (S.D. 1915)
151 N.W. 1020; 1915 S.D. LEXIS 35
Smith

Gorman v. Madden

Opinion of the Court

SMITH, J.

Action in the circuit court of Hamlin county. Findings of fact, conclusions of law, and judgment for plaintiff were entered on November 4, 1912, and notice thereof served on defendants’ counsel on November 9, 1912. On December 6, 1912, the trial court, on defendants’ application, entered an order staying execution, and extending the time for giving notice of in*267tention to move for new trial until February 15, 1913. The stay of execution required defendants to give a bond to secure payment of the judgment. On February 15th, the date on which the stay expired, defendants’ counsel served on plaintiff notice that they would give no stay bond, but would avail themselves of the extension of time within which to serve notice of intention to move for new trial and for motion for new trial, and at the same time served on plaintiff’s counsel a purported statement of case, with specifications of error, and notice of intention to move for new trial. Plaintiff’s counsel returned the .papers served, assigning as reason therefor the failure of defendants to give the stay bond required by the order of December 6th. Om February 17th plaintiff’s counsel served notice of motion returnable March 1st to vacates the stay and extension order of December 6th, and on March 8, 1913, the trial court made an order vacating that order. On April 9, 1913, defendants served notice of motion to vacate 'the order of March 8, 1913, and another order dated March 22d, hereinafter referred to, returnable April 28th, 1913. The main ground of the latter motion was that the order of March 8, 1913, was entered at Huron in the Ninth judicial circuit, in an action pending in the Third judicial circuit, On March 12, 1913, defendants’ counsel made an affidavit asking the judge who tried the action to fix another time within which to serve notice of intention, • and to settle the record on defendants'’ motion for a new trial, and on March 18th, upon notice to- plaintiff’s counsel, made application to the trial1 court for an order fixing another time within which to serve notice of intention, motion for new trial, and to settle the record. On March 22d the trial court entered an order refusing such extension. For various reasons- the -hearing on the motion, set for April 28, 1913, was continued from time to time until January 30, 1914. On that date said -motion was brought on for hearing before Judge Taylor, at Watertown, at which time all proceedings had subsequent to the entry of judgment were presented for review, together with an application of defendants to vacate the order of March 22, 1913, refusing a further extension. On the 10th of February, 1914, pursuant to -said hearing, the court entered an -order, among other things reciting that:

“This matter coming on to be heard by the court, Hon. Alva *268E. Taylor, judge of the Ninth judicial circuit presiding, at the courtroom, city of Watertown, Codington county, S. D., upon the motion of defendants to vacate and set aside the order made in the above-entitled cause, dated' March 8, 1913, striking from the records and files the defendants’ notice of intention to move for a new trial, and defendants’ purported statement of the case herein, and the other order dated March 22, 1913, denying, defendants’ application for an order fixing a time within which defendants might serve another notice of intention to move for a new trial and settle a record herein, * * * it -is ordered that the motion of the defendants to vacate and set aside the orders made herein, one dated March 8, 1913, and the other dated March 22, 1913, be, and the same are, hereby denied, and the defendants be and are hereby allowed an exception to this order.”

This appeal is from the latter order.

[1-3] The provision in the order of 'December 6th staying execution and the provision granting an extension of time are entirely distinct and independent. The order of extension could not be, and was not, in terms, conditioned upon the giving of the bond staying execution pending appeal, nor could the trial court vacate the order of extension because of the failure to file’ such bond. Within the period of extension, defendant served and filed a notice of intention and proposed statement, and the trial judge was without authority to strike such notice of intention and statement from the files, on the ground that sufficient reason did not exist, on December 6th, to warrant the order of extension. The order of March 8th, striking the notice of intention and proposed statement from the records, was therefore erroneous. Defendants had the legal right to have the sufficiency of the proposed statement considered and settled, either in its original form, or as properly amended, and after such settlement they had a right to have the motion for a new trial passed upon. The order made by the trial judge on March 8th, not being appealable, though erroneous, could be reviewed only in. the manner adopted by appellant. Custer County Bank v. Mercantile Co., 16 S. D. 579, 94 N. W. 582.

[4] Under the peculiar facts of this case, regardless of the general rule, we are of the opinion the application of March 18th, for a new extension, and the order of March. 22d, denying the *269same, should not be held an abandonment or waiver of the tuior proceedings seeking to vacate the order of March 8th.

The order of February xo, 1914, and the order of March 8, 1913, are reversed, and the cause remanded for further proceedings in acordance with the views herein expressed.

Reference

Full Case Name
GORMAN v. MADDEN
Cited By
1 case
Status
Published