Cohen v. Wallace
Cohen v. Wallace
Opinion of the Court
Application for a writ of mandate to compel the settlement of a bill of exceptions.
The petition sets forth that petitioner, Louis Cohen, was tried and convicted in the superior court of the city and county of San Francisco, before respondent, the Hon. William T. Wallace, a judge of said court, of the crime of perjury; that judgment was entered on the verdict on January 18, 1895, and that thereafter, on January 28th, and within the time allowed by law, petitioner, upon notice to the district attorney, delivered to the clerk of the court for said judge a proposed bill of exceptions in said case for settlement; that on the thirtieth day of January, two days after the delivery of said proposed bill to the clerk, the respondent, as such judge, made an order refusing to settle said bill, and directing that it be stricken from the files of said court. The prayer is that respondent may be required by the mandate of this court to settle said bill.
In response to the alternative writ issued upon said petition the district attorney appeared in behalf of respondent and filed an answer, wherein it is admitted that respondent has refused to settle the proposed bill,
We do not think the action of the respondent can be sustained. An examination and comparison of the proposed bill in connection with the transcript of the evidence taken at the trial satisfies us that the learned judge of the trial court was misled in assuming that the bill, as presented by petitioner, was a mere transcript of the reporter’s notes. It cannot properly be said to be such, either in fact or in form. The testimony taken at the trial comprises, exclusive of the examination of talesmen upon their voir dire, some two hundred typewritten pages of the reporter’s transcript; the examination of talesmen covers about twenty-eight or thirty pages more, making a transcript in all of about two hundred and thirty pages. The proposed bill consists of one hundred and one pages of type-written matter, but of this the statement of the evidence, including the objections and exceptions reserved thereon, covers but fifty-five pages, showing that the evidence is condensed in the bill to only about one-fourth of its original volume. It is true that the evidence is to a considerable extent stated in the bill by question and answer, but this would seem to be largely necessary in order to point the very numerous objections and exceptions which appear to have been taken and reserved. For such purpose it is proper to so state it. -It furthermore appears that some fifteen pages of the statement of the evidence is taken up by the examination as a witness of the short
The rest of the bill, other than that portion devoted to the statement of the evidence, consists of other matters arising during the progress of the proceedings in
The proposed bill in no proper sense comes within the objection stated in People v. Getty, 49 Cal. 581, relied upon by respondent as a warrant for his action in the premises. In that case it appeared that the bill of exceptions found in the record consisted simply of the reporter’s notes of the trial, without any attempt at condensation or the elimination of immaterial matter in any particular, and in passing upon the case this court said: “In no conceivable case can it be necessary or proper that a bill of exceptions should be made up in that manner. It was never intended that the reporter’s notes should constitute a bill of exceptions. The evidence relating to the points presented should be stated, as far as possible, in narrative form, or by a statement of its substance, or what it tended to prove, and the questions should be stated only when it is necessary to present the point of an objection thereto.” And it was said that the judge of the court below would be justified
From these cases it may be fairly taken as established that in instances where the proposed bill is either
This doctrine, however, is a harsh and rigid one, and if inconsiderately applied would be liable to great abuse, and frequently operate a virtual denial of justice to a defendant, solely through the ignorance, incompetency, or indolence of counsel, for which he may be in no way responsible. For these reasons we are not disposed to extend its application to cases not falling strictly within the class to which it has heretofore been held to apply.
Even in such cases we are of the opinion that it would be better, as a general rule, if the judge of the trial court, disregarding as far as possible technical objections, should endeavor to settle the bill rather than refuse it. For this purpose it is not necessary that the labor of making a proper bill of exceptions should be assumed by the judge. The party presenting the objectionable bill could be required by the judge to put it in proper shape, giving a reasonable time for such purpose. As suggested in Sansome v. Myers, 80 Cal. 486: “We must not be understood as intending to justify the too prevalent habit on the part of some attorneys of presenting an imperfect statement, thereby casting upon opposing counsel and the court the labor of piecing out and making complete a statement that should have been made perfect by the appealing party in the first instance. Such a course, whether it results from a design to gain an undue advantage or from indolence, should be severely condemned, and the party practicing it should be required by the judge to make and present a proper statement.”
For these reasons we are of opinion that the respondent should have proceeded to a settlement of the pro
It is so ordered.
Harrison, J., Garoutte, J., McFarland, J., Henshaw, J., and Beatty, C. J., concurred.
Mr. Justice Temple, not haying heard the argument, did not participate in the foregoing decision.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- LOUIS COHEN v. WILLIAM T. WALLACE, Judge, etc.
- Cited By
- 8 cases
- Status
- Published
- Syllabus
- Criminal Law—Bill of Exceptions—Transcript of Reporter’s Notes— Question and Answer— Settlement of Bill — Mandamus.—Where a bill of exceptions, as presented, is not a mere transcript of the reporter’s notes, but condenses the statement of the evidence, it is not ground of refusal to settle the bill that a considerable portion of the evidence is placed in the bill of exceptions by question and answer to point objections and exceptions taken and reserved; and the judge will be compelled by writ of mandate to settle the bill of exceptions. Id.—Evidence of Shorthand Reporter—Question and Answer.—Evidence taken upon the examination of a shorthand reporter as a witness, in reference to testimony claimed to have been given by the defendant upon a former occasion, is necessarily inserted in the bill of exceptions by question and answer in detail. Id.—Testimony Given by Talesmen.—The statement of testimony given by talesmen when sworn upon their voir dire is properly inserted by question and answer in the bill of exceptions. Id.—Mode of Stating Evidence—Discretion.—While as a rule a bill of exceptions should make as short and succinct a statement of the evidence as possible, either in narrative form, giving its substance, or by stating what the evidence tended to establish, yet no fixed rule can be laid down upon the subject; and in frequent instances it may be necessary to state the evidence by question and answer in order to lay before the court the exact statement of the witness, even though it may not be desired to point an exception, and it must be left largely to the discretion of the trial judge when settling the bill to determine the proper method to be pursued in any given case. Id.—Surplusage in Bill—Refusal of Settlement.—The fact that some things are stated in the bill of exceptions which might with propriety be left out of the bill is no ground for refusing to settle the bill, and the very purpose of the statute in requiring a settlement to be had is that such matter may be eliminated. Id.—Instructions.—It is not necessary to incorporate in the bill of exceptions in a criminal case the instructions asked by the defendant and refused by the court, where they are properly indorsed by the judge and become a part of the judgment-roll; nor should the oral charge of the court be inserted in the bill where it has been authenticated by the judge, but, if it has not been so authenticated, it becomes proper to preserve it in the bill. Id.—Rule of Previous Oases not to be Extended__The rule established in previous cases, that where a proposed bill of exceptions is merely a copy of the reporter’s transcript, without any effort to reduce it to proper form for the purpose of presenting the questions involved, or where it is a mere skeleton, it may be disregarded, and a settlement of it will not be required, is a harsh and rigid rule, liable to abuse and to operate as a virtual denial of justice to a defendant through the ignorance, incompetency, or indolence of his counsel, and will not be extended to cases not falling strictly within the class to which it has heretofore been held to apply; and even in such cases it would be better as a rule for the judge of the trial court to disregard as far as possible technical objections, and endeavor to settle a bill of exceptions rather than refuse it.