Pierson v. McCahill
Before: Crocker
Synopsis
An appeal from an order refusing to change the venue of an action, operates as a stay of all further proceedings in the case in the Court below, until such appeal is determined.
An undertaking in the sum of three hundred dollars, as required by the three hundred and forty-eighth section of the Practice Act, is sufficient to perfect such appeal and stay proceedings.
If one of the terms of a written agreement is left out by mistake when the same is drafted, parol evidence of that fact may be received, and the agreement reformed and made to correspond with the intentions of the parties.
Crocker, J. delivered the opinion of the Court—Kobton, J. concurring.
This case has been previously before this Court on two separate appeals. One will be found reported in 21 Cal. 122, and the other in 22 Id. 127. In the first appeal the judgment for the defendant was reversed. The second case was an appeal from interlocutory orders, one of which was a denial of a motion to change the venue, [253]in which the action of the Court below was affirmed. While this second appeal was pending, the action was brought on for trial by the defendant, and the plaintiff applied to the Court for a continuance, upon the ground, among others, that the appeal from the order refusing to change the place of trial was still pending. The Court refused the continuance, and compelled the plaintiff to go to trial, which he now assigns as error.
The plaintiff contends that, having filed the undertaking on this appeal in the sum of three hundred dollars, required by Sec. 348 of the Practice Act, the appeal was perfected, and it operated as a stay of all further proceedings in the case in the Court below until such appeal was determined, under the provisions of Sec. 353. We think such is the proper construction of the statute upon the subject. In cases of appeal from an order refusing a change of venue, the statute has required no other or further undertaking than that prescribed by Sec. 348. The necessity that there should be a stay of proceedings in an appeal from such an order is apparent; as otherwise the party appealing might be forced to a trial in the wrong county, before the appeal was determined, and thus he would lose all benefit from his appeal in case the order should be reversed; or else we would be compelled to hold that such reversal would operate as a reversal of any judgment which might in the meantime have been rendered against the appellant.
Sec. 353 was evidently intended to provide for a stay of proceed-. ings in cases of this kind. It is true that that section provide s that “ the Court below may proceed upon any other matter included in the action, and not affected by the judgment, or order appealed from.” But the very matter affected by the order appealed from in this case was the right of the Court below to try the case, and whether the trial should not be had in some other county, before another Court. It was a matter affecting the trial of the case, and no trial could properly be had until the appeal from the order relating to the proper place for that trial had been determined. All other matters, except the trial of the case, could be properly proceeded with during the pendency of the appeal.. It follows that the Court erred in refusing the continuance.
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