The district court, in the exercise of its jurisdiction, under
an Act entitled " An Act to ascertain and settle the private land
claims in the State of California," approved March 3, 1857, 9 Stat.
631, rendered a decree Nov. 12, 1859, rejecting the claim of A. He
died Jan. 22, 1869, and his executrix was, by an order of the court
entered April 3, 1875, permitted to become the party claimant of
the land. She thereupon moved for a new trial and the reversal of
the decree. The motion was overruled, and on the same day an appeal
was allowed her from the decree and from the order refusing a new
trial.
Held:
1. That the appeal from the decree was not taken in time.
2. That no appeal lies from the order refusing a new trial.
The facts are stated in the opinion of the Court.
Page 95 U. S. 286
MR. CHIEF JUSTICE WAITE delivered the opinion of the Court.
This is an appeal from the District Court of the United States
for the District of California, in a proceeding under the "Act to
ascertain and settle the private land claims in the State of
California," passed March 3, 1851, 9 Stat. 631. The case was here
at the December Term, 1857, when a former decree of the district
court was reversed and the cause sent back for further hearing.
United States v.
Cambuston, 20 How. 59. The mandate was filed in the
court below May 5, 1859, and the further hearing resulted in a
decree, Nov. 12, 1859, rejecting the claim. The court adjourned for
the term on the first Monday in December, 1859, previous to which
time no motion for a new trial or petition for rehearing had been
filed.
On the 24th of February, 1860, Lansing B. Mizner, as "a party in
interest," filed with the clerk of the court a petition for
rehearing. What his interest actually was nowhere appears in the
record. A copy of this petition was served on the district attorney
of the United States the same day the original was filed in the
clerk's office, and, March 13, 1860, the district attorney and the
attorney for the claimant entered into the following
stipulation:
"It is hereby stipulated that Tully R. Wise, acting United
States district attorney, waived written notice to him of a motion
to be made for a new trial during the term of the United States
district court, ending the first Monday in December last, and that
he considered a verbal notice of intention to move as sufficient to
him, and then given to him, the said Wise. It is further stipulated
that if the said Henry Cambuston now has the right to have the said
motion heard, it shall not be prejudiced by delay until the return
of the Hon. Ogden Hoffman."
Nothing further was done until April 2, 1875, when the widow of
Cambuston -- he having died Jan. 22, 1869 -- appeared in court and
asked to "be permitted to become the party claimant of the land" as
executrix of the will of her deceased husband, which had been
admitted to probate May 3, 1869. An order to this effect was made
April 3, 1875, and on the same day the claimant asked that a new
trial be granted and that the decree rejecting the claim might be
reversed. The
Page 95 U. S. 287
parties thereupon appeared and, after hearing, the court denied
the motion. On the same day, April 3, 1875, this appeal was allowed
both from the final decree and the order refusing a new trial. The
United States now move to dismiss the appeal because taken too
late.
The statute in force when the decree was rendered provided that
writs of error and appeals should not be brought to this court
except within five years after passing or rendering the decree or
judgment complained of. 1 Stat. 85, sec. 22. As this decree was
rendered Nov. 12, 1859, and the appeal not taken until April 3,
1875, it is clear that the motion to dismiss should be granted
unless the petition for rehearing or motion for a new trial
suspended the operation of this statute.
In
Brockett v.
Brockett, 2 How. 238, it was held that a petition
for rehearing filed during the term and actually entertained by the
court suspended the operation of a decree in equity until the
petition was disposed of. Neither the petition for a rehearing nor
the motion for a new trial in this case was filed or the attention
of the court in any manner called to such a proceeding during the
term at which the decree was rendered. The proceeding before the
district court was statutory, and not at common law or in equity.
It was, however, a suit, and must be governed by the rules of law
applicable to that class of judicial proceedings. Consequently,
when the term closed at which the decree was rendered, the parties
were out of court, and the jurisdiction ended so far as that court
was concerned, no steps having been taken to keep it alive. The
decree was then in full force and operative for all purposes.
According to the practice in suits at common law and in equity,
no step has since been taken which can have the effect of
suspending the decree for the purpose of an appeal. By sec. 726 of
the Revised Statutes, the courts of the United States are empowered
to grant new trials in cases where there has been a trial by jury
for reasons for which new trials have usually been granted in the
courts of law, and by sec. 987, when a circuit court enters
judgment in a civil action either upon a verdict or on a finding of
the court upon the facts, execution may, on motion of either party,
at the discretion of
Page 95 U. S. 288
the court, and on such conditions for the security of the
adverse party as it may judge proper, be stayed forty-two days from
the time of entering judgment to give time to file in the clerk's
office of the court a petition for a new trial. If such petition is
filed within such term of forty-two days, with a certificate
thereon of any judge of the court that he allows it to be filed,
execution shall, of course, be further stayed until the next
session of the court. From this legislation it is apparent that it
was not the policy of Congress to suspend the operation of a
judgment so as to allow an application for a new trial in any case
beyond a period of forty-two days from the time of its rendition.
Here, judgment was rendered Nov. 12, 1859, and the petition for
rehearing was not filed until one hundred and twenty-five days
thereafter. The stipulation between counsel, under date of March
13, 1860, was not that a motion for new trial had been filed, but
that notice of an intention to make such a motion had been given,
and that if a hearing could then be had, it should not be
prejudiced by further delay until the return of the district judge.
This application seems never to have been brought to the attention
of the court. It is unnecessary to decide whether such a motion can
be filed after the term has closed if no application is made during
the term for stay of execution under the statute or for an
extension of time to prepare the motion.
In suits in equity, the practice is even more strict. Equity
rule 88 provides that in cases where an appeal lies to this Court,
no rehearing shall be granted after the term at which the final
decree shall have been entered and recorded.
We are clearly of the opinion, therefore, that the appeal from
the decree of Nov. 12, 1859, was not taken in time, and as no
appeal lies from the order refusing the new trial --
Warner v.
Norton, 20 How, 448 -- it follows that the motion
to dismiss must be granted, and it is
So ordered.