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On Petition for Rehear-ing
After modification and affirmance of judgment appealed from, a petition for rehearing was filed. The Supreme Court, Per Curiam, held that petition for rehearing should be confined to statement of points upon which right to present argument and authority is sought and that argument upon merits is out of place in such petition; and held that since the thirty-four page petition filed herein was, in substance, a reargument of appeal, rehearing must be denied.
*313 OPINIONPer Curiam: With increasing frequency counsel seem to be confusing the function of a petition for rehearing with the rehearing itself. In this case a “petition” of 34 pages has been filed by the appellants which, upon patient reading, is discovered to be in substance a reargument of the appeal. For this reason, rehearing is denied.
We deem this an appropriate occasion to point out to the members of the bar that argument upon the merits is out of place in a petition for rehearing. The. petition asks leave to argue and should, therefore, confine itself to a statement of the points upon which the right to present argument and authority is sought. See “Rehearing In American Appellate Courts”, 44 Cal. Law Review 627. At page 658 of the cited article it is stated (referring to the petition), “It should be brief and it should not be argumentative; it should point to the conflict created [by] or the ‘controlling’ matter overlooked in the original decision. It should not be expected to also serve the role of persuading the court how the conflict or error should be resolved. That is the object of resubmission. The object of the petition is only to show that the petitioner is entitled to a rehearing, not that he is entitled to a different decision on the merits.”
Document Info
Docket Number: 3981
Citation Numbers: 304 P.2d 395, 72 Nev. 293, 1956 Nev. LEXIS 117
Judges: Badt, Merrill, Eather
Filed Date: 11/30/1956
Precedential Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/19/2024