Davies v. New Castle & Lowell Railway Co.
Davies v. New Castle & Lowell Railway Co.
Opinion of the Court
An examination of the motion for new trial which was filed in the trial court, and also of the petition in error filed in the circuit court, will show that each and all of. the errors relied on for a reversal of the judgment in favor of the present plaintiff in error, were exhibited only by the bill of exceptions, and hence, if the motion to strike the bill of exceptions from the files had been sustained; or, if the circuit court for any reason assigned in the motion, had refused to consider the bill, an affirmance of the judgment of the trial court would necessarily have followed.
And if this eourt concludes that the circuit court erred in considering the bill of exceptions and passing on errors said to appear therein, a reversal of its judgment would be followed by an affirmance of the judgment of the trial court. •
The bill of exceptions, except perhaps the file marks and memoranda thereon required by statute, i's not a part of the record in this proceeding, and hence we have but the two questions:
1. Did the circuit court err in not permitting the present plaintiff in error to file the amended motion to strike the bill of exceptions from the files ?
2. Was it error to refuse to strike the bill from the files for the reasons contained in the original motion?
We think these questions may be considered together. The motions are not very different in their scope and meaning, and while both might be charged with lack of certainty and definiteness, we are disposed to give them a liberal construction. According to the record, it does not appear what the plaintiff in error expected to show on the hearing of the amended motion, had it been filed. The facts behind
Looking into the brief of counsel we may learn what is absent from the record, but we are not justified in reversing judgments on facts asserted in the ' briefs of counsel. Nor do we find any record of evidence offered or introduced (if any was offered, or introduced) to sustain the original motion.
Therefore we are remitted to the file marks, journal and docket entries which are in the record as the only means whereby we can determine the questions presented in argument.
As shown in our statement of the case, the motion for new trial was overruled by the trial court on the twentieth day of July, 1903. It was incumbent on the excepting party to reduce his exceptions to writing and file the same within forty days after the overruling of the motion for new trial. The bill was prepared and it was filed on the fifteenth day of August, 1903. This was within the forty days, and the excepting party had performed the duty made incumbent upon him by the statute. On the nineteenth day of August objections to the bill were filed with the clerk.
On the tenth day of September thereafter the bill was transmitted by the clerk to the ‘£ Court, ’ ’ as disclosed by the docket entry. ' Another entry states it as a transmission to ££Hon. T. I. Gilmer,” and the entry on the bill indicates that it was received by ££T. I. Gilmer, Judge of the Court of Common Pleas,” on the seventeenth day of September, 1903. The bill was returned to the clerk on the eighteenth of September and was filed by the clerk on the same day.
■“That is one of the questions on which plaintiff in error bases his complaint that the circuit court erred to his prejudice in refusing to permit him to file his amended motion to strike from the files said bill of exceptions. Had leave been given to him so to do, a showing could then have been made by him of the manner and time of transmission of said bill by the clerk and facts could then have been measured by the requirements of the statute.”
As before stated, the plaintiff in error seemed content with the refusal to permit the filing of the amended motion, because no statement was made to the court of what would be disclosed under it, if once filed. It seems also, that no attempt was made to prove anything against the bill, under the original motion, and unless we are to presume error whenever it is merely asserted, there is nothing of merit in the proposition.
There is another criticism of the bill. It is, that while the present statute requires the clerk of the court to transmit the bill to the “trial judge,” it appears that he transmitted it to the “Court,” and when the bill reached the “Court,” he endorsed its receipt “T. I. Gilmer, Judge of the Court of Common Pleas.” Also, that when he returned it to the clerk, he endorsed it — “On this eighteenth day of September, 1903, this bill returned to the clerk. T. I. Gilmer, Judge.”
It is true the clerk recites that he transmitted the bill to the “Court,” and it is true the “Court” received it, and. signed his'name “T. I. Gilmer, Judge of the Court of Common Pleas,” thereto. But in judicial proceedings, it is difficult to have a trial court without a trial judge. The case was heard in the court of common pleas, and the judge who presided at the trial was as much the trial court, as he was the trial judge. The person is the same, and the functions and duties are much the same, and until some one is able to separate the “Court” from the “trial judge,” and make them different persons, we decline to endorse the contention made on that subject. It is the same bill; allowed and signed by the judge who tried the case, in which he acted both as a court and trial judge.
We are also asked to consider that it does not appear how the clerk transmitted the bill to the court or trial judge, and it is claimed that it . should have been transmitted by him personally; that is, the clerk, in such case, must make manual delivery to the trial judge, and that it does not appear that this was done in the case at bar. We cannot concur in this position. The word transmit has no such nar
All the objections made to the bill in the circuit court, as well as those presented to us by counsel for plaintiff in error, are purely technical, and under our present law, are not valid. Under our former statutes, several things were required of the excepting party in order to obtain a review of his case. Some of these were held in former decisions of this court to be mandatory and jurisdictional, and if not complied with the bill could not be considered.
We hope that day is now past. The former practice furnished a yawning sepulcher, wherein were swallowed up the honest efforts of litigants to have their controversies reviewed by a higher court. These lost rights made earnest protest to the general assembly, until it finally acted, and has adopted a more simple method of relief, and has attempted to utterly cast out some of the difficulties which formerly hedged the way to a reviewing court. The legislative intent is plain in the present statutes, and we are not now required to follow as precedents all decisions of the court made under the former legislation.
Lastly it is claimed that the bill is not a part of the record .of the case, because no entry was put on the journal making it a part of the record.
Judgment affirmed.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.