Henry v. Couch

DOWDELL, J.

— This was an action in trover brought by the plaintiff, Henry, against M. P. Couch and Thomas Rice. On the trial judgment was rendered in favor of the defendant Oduch and against the defendant Rice. Thereupon the defendant Rice made a motion to- set aside the verdict and judgment rendered against him and to have a new trial. This motion the court granted. The judgment as to Couch was not disturbed. The plaintiff Henry appeals. The certificate of appeal recites that the appeal is ta.ken from “the judgment of the circuit court rendered against the plaintiff,” etc. Motion is now made to> dismiss the appeal on the ground that there were two- judgments either of ivhich would support an appeal, and it is not shown from which the appeal is taken. The ruling of the court on the motion for a new trial properly speaking is not a judgment of the court, that is a final judgment that becomes a part of therecord, but a mere ruling on a motion, from which no appeal would lie but for the statute. And under the statute which authorizes the appeal, and which designates such ruling as a decision on the motion, the ruling cannot be reviewed except on bill of exceptions. The only judgment rendered against the plaintiff was the one rendered on the trial in favor of the defendant Couch, and it is from this judgment that the appeal must be considered as having been tajeen. The motion to dismiss must, therefore, be denied.

The order of the court extending the time for the signing of a bill of exceptions in vacation provides only for a bill of exceptions on the motion for a new trial; no *572allowance is made for a bill of exceptions on the original trial. The bill having been signed ont of term time cannot be looked to for the purpose of reviewing the court’s action on the first trial, as no order was made in term time for such bill.

No appeal was taken from the decision of the court on the motion, in setting aside the judgment and granting a new trial as to the. defendant Rice. Without an appeal in this respect, there can be no review of the court’s action on the motion.

The court’s action in overruling a motion for a new trial may be reviewed on a bill of exceptions, upon an appeal taken from the judgment rendered on tlie original trial, or in such case the appeal may under the statute be prosecuted from the decision on the motion with hill of exceptions. But that is not the case here. Tine motion was granted and the judgment set aside, and in such case the appeal must be taken from the decision on the motion, with bill of exceptions as the statute provides, there being no judgment from which to appeal. As the bill of exceptions in the present case cannot be considered for any purpose, and the assignments relate to rulings that can only he presented for review by bill, there being no* assignments of error on the record, it follows that the judgment appealed from in favor of defendant Couch must be affirmed. This will leave the cause in the court below for another trial as to the defendant Rice.