Barber v. Palo Verde Mutual Water Co.
Before: Waste
WASTE, C. J.
Motion to dismiss an appeal from an order of the superior court of Riverside County purporting, to change the place of trial of the action from the city of Blythe, in said county, to Riverside, the county seat. The action was brought for conversion of shares of stock of the defendant company. The answer denied conversion and set up specifically that plaintiff was not the real party in interest. When the cause was at issue it was stipulated between the parties that it might be set down for trial. It is the custom in Riverside County for the superior court, acting under the permission granted by section 142 of the Code of Civil Procedure, to hold a regular semi-annual term of the court at Blythe, which is situated more than 200 miles from the county seat. The section, as amended in 1919, provides that whenever the judge or judges of the superior court, authorized to hold or preside at a court appointed to be held in a particular place in a county, “deem it necessary or advisable,” they may “direct that the court be held or continued at any other place in the city and county, county, city or town not less than one hundred twenty miles distant from the county seat.” The court set the present action for trial during the term to be held in Blythe beginning October 26, 1925. Subsequently the plaintiff moved for an order changing the date and place of trial from the October term at Blythe to a date convenient to the calendar of the court at Riverside. The motion was supported by affidavits, and ‘ was made upon the ground that a fair and impartial trial could not be had at Blythe. The court granted the motion,
[651]
and the defendant Palo Verde Mutual Water Company has appealed. The plaintiff and respondent now moves to dismiss on the ground that the order granting the motion is not appealable.
Appellant’s contention in support of its appeal is that the order of the lower court directing that the cause be heard at Riverside instead of Blythe was, in effect, an order changing the place of trial, within the contemplation of section 963, subdivision 2, of the Code of Civil Procedure, granting an appeal from such orders. We are not persuaded-that that is so. The authority given the superior court to change the place of trial of actions is found in section 397 et seq. of the code, which clearly, by language and intent, relate to changing the place of trial from one county to another. We are of the view that the language in section 963 of the code, providing that an appeal may be taken from an order of the superior court “changing or refusing to change the place of trial,” should not be construed to include an order changing or refusing to change the place of trial from one place in the county to another place in the same county. Section 397, providing in what cases the place of trial may be changed from county to county, on motion, and the provision of section 963, permitting an appeal from an order changing or refusing to change the place of trial, were enacted at the same time (1872) as part of the Code of Civil Procedure. Until section 142 of the code was amended, in 1919, to permit the holding or continuance of court at some place in the county not less than" 120 miles distant from the county seat, there was no opportunity for the contention now advanced by appellant to be made. In 1923, section 963, relating to appeals, was amended in one particular not here pertinent. Appellant argues that, by the re-enactment of the section, including the provision giving the right of appeal from an order changing or refusing to change the place of trial, it must follow that the legislature not only had in mind the provisions of section 397, but intended to allow an appeal from an order changing or refusing to change the place of trial in the same county. The rule is, however, that a clause in a statute will be given no different meaning after an amendment than it had before, if the amendment relates to other matters, and was obviously not designed to affect its
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