Writ .of error: time for taking, Mtrh!°po°tpSn'J. consideration. The question now to be determined arises ■on a motion to dismiss the writ of error on the ground that it was not brought till more than one year after the final judgment was rendered in the court below. The judgment was entered^Eebruary 6, 1896. The wrp. 0£ error wag S11ed out on March 10, 1897, and was lodged in the office of the clerk of the district court on March 20, 1897. The judgment had been ■entered on the same day the verdict was returned, under a rule of court which required that to be done when the party failed to give notice of intention to file motion for new trial. Rule 29, par. 1. The motion was, however, filed (February 8th) during the term, and within five days after verdict, as provided by rule. Pule 29, par. 2. On February 15, 1896, the motion was continued by an order as follows: “It is ordered by the court that the time for arguing and submitting” said motion “and the disposition of the same be, and the same hereby is, extended and continued for thirty days.” This continuance carried the cause from a special into the regular March term. The motion was overruled March 27, 1896. The period of limitation runs from the day of final judgment to the time when the writ of error was lodged in the court below. Polleys v. Improvement Co., 113 U. S. 81. It therefore becomes necessary to determine when the judgment became final in the court below; and of course, if this occurred when the judgment was entered (February 6, 1896), the writ of error was barred. At common law the judgment was not entered until the conclusion of the cause, and therefore not until the motion for a new trial had been determined. Under our practice the rule is otherwise, and the judgment may be immediately entered upon the verdict, and the motion for a new trial may be made and passed upon afterwards. When the motion is filed in proper time, the proceeding is in fieri until the motion is denied; and until then the judgment must be considered as in paper, or as suspended as a roll, in the common law sense, by the motion. Spanagel v. Dellinger, 34 Cal. 482; State v. Kansas City Court of Appeals (Mo. Sup.), 16 S. W. 415; Higginbotham v. Campbell (Ga.), 11 S. E. 1027; Wheeler v. Barr (Ind. App.), 33 N. E. 975. The third paragraph of rule.29 provides that every such motion shall be argued or submitted and determined during the term at which the case is tried, unless the court, for good cause, expressly continue it. A failure by the court to pass on or continue such motion during the same term at which the case has been tried shall be considered as a denial of the same, and no continuance of such motion shall be for a longer period than thirty days after the expiration of the term. Such is the substance of the rule, and under it it will not be necessary to say in this case whether the pendency of a motion for new trial will suspend a judgment beyond the-term, where the motion has not been passed upon or specially continued; nor will it be necessary to say whether an order continuing such motion for a longer period than thirty days would be a nullity or merely an error. In this case the motion was filed in proper time, and could have been filed without leave first had, and was expressly continued for thirty days, so that the jurisdiction of the court to amend or set aside the-judgment was preserved notwithstanding the lapse of the special term. Sage v. Railroad Co., 93 U. S. 418. But it is-contended by the defendant in error that when the period of thirty days expired (March 16, 1896), the judgment became-final by operation of the rule last mentioned. The order expressly provides that the motion is continued for argument, submission, and disposition by the court. It would seem, therefore, to be clear that the court did entertain the motion, and we do not think that the mere failure of the court to pass-upon it within the thirty days operated to divest jurisdiction over it, but rather that the court deferred its action upon it for-good cause, within its uncLoubted power to thus further continue the motion. A construction which would deprive the-court of jurisdiction of a motion while the court was entertaining it would be highly penal, and is unwarranted by the language of this rule. In Smelting Co. v. Billings,. 150 U. S. 36, 14 Sup. Ct. 6, a decree was entered dismissing a bill in equity, and a motion was then made for a rehearing, which was-not passed upon until some six or seven months afterwards. It was contended that limitation ran from the date of the-decree, and not from the date of overruling the motion, but the supreme court of the United States says: “The rule is that if a motion or petition for a rehearing is made or presented in season, and entertained by the court, the time limited for a writ of error or appeal does not begin to run until the motion or petition is disposed of. Until then the judgment or decree does not take final effect for purposes of the writ of error or-appeal. Brockett v. Brockett, 2 How. 238; Railway Co. v. Murphy, 111 U. S. 488, 4 Sup. Ct. 497; Memphis v. Brown, 94 U. S. 715.” The judgment in this case did not become final until the motion for a new trial was determined, and the year for suing out the writ of error did not begin to run until then. The motion to dismiss will therefore be overruled.
Smith, O. J., and Collier, Hamilton and Laughlin, JJ., concur.