Industrial Commission v. Musselli
Industrial Commission v. Musselli
Opinion of the Court
The provisions of the statute applicable to the filing of a motion for a new trial are as follows (Section 11578, General Code): “The application must be made within three days after the verdict or decision is rendered.”
It is evident from an examination of the entries of the lower courts that those courts entertained the view that the motion for a new trial filed April 29, 1919, was filed too late within the purview of the quoted section, although filed on the same day that the journal entry was prepared and submitted to the court and on the same day the clerk received and filed it. It is also evident that the lower courts held that the oral pronouncement of a decision by the trial judge upon the issues made it incumbent upon the defeated party to file his motion for a new trial within three days after such pronouncement. From an inspection of the entry of the common pleas court it is evident that that court regarded the word “decision,” found in Section 11578, General Code, as synonymous with “judgment;” for the entry recites that “the court on said day rendered judgment orally in favor of the plaintiff.”
The concession made by the court in its journal entry that its decision was a judgment is undoubtedly correct and has been heretofore approved by this court. It was so treated by Spear, Judge, in Buckeye Pipe Line Co. v. Fee, 62 Ohio St., 543, 555, where the same words were construed in connection with an application for a new trial. There the code (Section 5305, Revised Statutes, now Section 11576, General Code) required that the motion should state that the decision was not sustained by
These terms were also used synonymously in the syllabus of State, ex rel. Faber, Recr., v. Jones et al., Judges, 95 Ohio St., 357. Therefore, if the decision be a judgment, must the application for a new trial be filed within three days after its oral pronouncement ? Section 11604, General Code, provides that “All judgments and orders must be entered on the journal of the court and specify clearly the relief granted or order made in the action.”
Section 11607, General Code, provides that “The record shall be made up from the petition, the process, return, pleadings subsequent thereto, reports, verdicts, orders, judgments, and all material acts and proceedings of the court.”
By Section 2874, General Code, it is made the duty of the clerk to endorse each pleading and order filed in his office, the time of filing, and to enter all judgments and proceedings of the courts of which he is by law the clerk.
It is a familiar rule that the court speaks only through its journals. Were the rule otherwise it would provide a wide field for controversy as to what the court actually decided. Not only would the features of the decision be left in doubt as between the parties to the suit, but as a Its pendens it might seriously affect the rights of others who had not been made parties thereto. The statutes we are now construing are remedial, and by the provisions of Section 10214, General Code, all proceedings under these statutes “shall be liberally construed, in order to promote its [their] object, and assist the parties in obtaining justice.”
What is meant by the word “decision” found in Section 11578, General Code? Is it the oral pronouncement of the judge, made from the bench, or is it rather the more deliberate decision of the court speaking through its journal entry? How can it be said that these remedial statutes are liberally construed in. the interest of substantial justice if the parties to the suit are relegated, for information, not to the entries made by the court, but to an oral decision made at the caprice of the judge and possibly in the absence and without the knowledge of counsel in the case ?
The necessity of construing these remedial statutes in the interests of justice to all parties in litigation is shown by their practical operation in the various courts of appeals in this state. Frequently cases are decided upon the circuit and decisions announced while the court is absent from the county wherein the judgment is to be entered. If a strict construction should apply, these applications for a new trial would of necessity have to be made within three days from the time of announcement of the decision, although the journal entry may not have been received and filed by the clerk until some time afterwards. And it would often require counsel of the defeated party to file his motion for a new trial without adequate information as to the nature of the judgment. The right of the court to make nunc pro tunc entries is not curtailed. This right is available, however, in the furtherance of justice only, Charles v. Fawley et al., 71 Ohio St., 50, but is not available where “it would operate to deprive a party of a substantial right.” Eldridge & Higgins Co. v. Barrere, 74 Ohio St., 389, 395.
We have no hesitation in holding that a motion
Judgments reversed.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.