This cause is an election contest for the office of superintendent of schools for El Dorado county, arising at the election held November 4, 1902. At the first trial judgment went in favor of the contestee, who had been declared elected and to whom a certificate of election had been issued, but on appeal to the supreme court the judgment was, on February 23, 1905, reversed. (McCarthy v. Wilson, 146 Cal. 323, [82 P. 243].) At the second trial judgment went for contestant on June 12, 1905, annulling contestee's certificate of election and setting aside his election to said office. On June 17, 1905, contestant served and filed notice of entry of judgment, and contestee having failed to serve his draft of bill of exceptions within ten days, and having failed to apply to the court or to counsel for contestant for an extension of time, contestee on July 1, 1905, applied to the court for relief under section 473 of the Code of Civil Procedure. The court granted contestee's motion on the following condition: "The respondent [contestee] shall within eight days let the contestant into the possession of the office in controversy, and permit the contestant to fully enjoy the emoluments thereof pending an appeal of this case to the district court of appeal and to the supreme court of the United States, should said last appeal be taken. Before surrendering said office, as here required, the contestant, McCarty, shall give security to the respondent, Wilson, that if said appeals, or either of them, are successful, that said contestant will pay to the respondent within ten days after the coming down of the remittitur therein the same emoluments of the said office that the respondent would have been *Page 156 entitled to had he remained in said office during the time contestant shall have been in possession thereof, together with respondent's costs on appeal. If said appeals, or either of them, are unsuccessful, respondent shall pay to the contestant contestant's costs on appeal, the respondent to give security to contestant for the payment of costs. If respondent shall fail within eight days to do this, his motion for time to file and serve a bill of exceptions herein will be denied. Doing this he will be granted ten days, and such additional time as may be necessary within which to file and serve his bill of exceptions." Contestee appeals from this order.
1. Appellant contends that the bill of exceptions was settled and filed within thirty days after notice of judgment, and hence the court erred in refusing to allow it. The contention is based upon the assumption, first, that the case falls under section 649 of the Code of Civil Procedure, which prescribes no time within which the exception shall be settled, but that it may be settled within a reasonable time; and, second, that under section 650 of the Code of Civil Procedure, the bill may be settled and filed at any time within thirty days. Appellant is clearly in error in this contention. The case falls under section 650, and that section requires that the party, who desires to have exceptions taken at the trial settled in a bill of exceptions, must within ten days after the entry of judgment and motion therefor, prepare and serve the draft of the bill, unless the time for so doing is extended by the judge or by stipulation of the opposing attorney. (Scott's Estate, 128 Cal. 579, [61 P. 98]; In re Clary's Estate, 112 Cal. 292, [44 P. 569].)
2. The grounds for asking the court to relieve contestee from his neglect to comply with the statute amounts to little more than excusable forgetfulness or failure to observe the flight of time, arising out of occupation in other cases. The facts are such as would ordinarily have justified the court either to grant or refuse the motion without such abuse of discretion in either case as would warrant reversal. The real point involved is whether the court abused its discretion in making its order conditional. Appellant claims that it is an unreasonable condition, and that the order should, on this ground, be reversed. That the court had the power to make *Page 157 its order conditional we have no doubt. Watson v. San Franciscoetc. R. R. Co., 41 Cal. 21, Youngman v. Tonner, 82 Cal. 611, [23 P. 120], and Douglass v. Todd, 96 Cal. 655, [31 Am. St. Rep. 247, 31 P. 623], are instances where conditions have been imposed in granting relief under section 473 of the Code of Civil Procedure.
Each case must be governed by its own facts and circumstances, which are seldom found to be the same in any two cases. In the present instance the supreme court had before it the merit of the controversy, so far as the controverted ballots were concerned, and decided that contestant was elected to the office. At the second trial contestant prevailed and was declared entitled to the office, and contestee's certificate of office was annulled. There is nothing now before us on this motion to show that any question will be presented on the appeal from the judgment not already decided by the supreme court. Indeed, the present transcript does not show that an appeal has been taken from the judgment. Our records elsewhere show that such appeal has been taken, but that transcript is not referred to or made part of this appeal and cannot be looked to. For aught that appears the appeal from the judgment may be upon wholly insufficient grounds, and may, through delay, result in contestee holding the office until the close of the term. Under such circumstances we cannot say that the court abused its discretion or imposed an unreasonable condition in requiring contestee to surrender the office to contestant pending the appeal, especially as the court required contestant to give security that he would repay to contestee whatever emoluments of the office contestant received should contestee prevail in his appeal.
It is claimed that the court did, in fact, settle the bill of exceptions. It does not so appear. The bill is not made part of this record nor does the indorsement of the judge thereon, if he made any, appear. Counsel for contestant state in their brief, and it is not denied, that the court certified the bill to be correct, but expressly refused to settle it because not filed and served within the statutory time, and because the contestee refused to comply with the conditions upon which the court ordered that the time within which to file and serve the bill would be extended. This statement accords *Page 158 with the order found in the record. This proceeding would not have been initiated if the court had in fact settled the bill. The purpose of contestee's motion, as stated therein, is to obtain time in "which to prepare, file, and serve his said exceptions."
The order is affirmed.
McLaughlin, J., and Buckles, J., concurred.