Piersol v. State Ex Rel. County Atty.

Supreme Court of Oklahoma
Piersol v. State Ex Rel. County Atty., 254 P. 104 (Okla. 1926)
122 Okla. 124; 1926 OK 596; 1926 Okla. LEXIS 225
PER CURIAM.

Piersol v. State Ex Rel. County Atty.

Opinion of the Court

PER CURIAM.

This is an action brought in the district court of Jackson comity by the s'ate .of Oklahoma ex rel. Frank Petree, county attorney, and vhe board of county commissioners of said county against C. S. Highsmith, county treasurer, and his sureties and George W. Piersol, ,T. E. Piersol. and Piersol Bond Company to recover for certain school equipment bonds issued by the board of education of the city of Alius and purchased by Highsmith, county treasurer, and sold by him to the Piersols and Piersol Bond Company for and in consideration of certain water improvement bonds issued by the town of Buffalo. Harper county, Okla.

Highsmith filed answer and cross-petition *125 in which he sought, judgment over against the Piersols and Piersol Bond Company in the event he was held liable. Judgment was rendered against Highsmith and his sureties for the sum of $10,133.35. and in his favor against the Piersols and Piersol Bond Company for the same amount. On the same day that judgment was rendered counsel for Highsmith dictated to the court reporter a motion for a new trial, which was signed by counsel, transcribed by the reporter and filed in the office of the court clerk. On said day counsel for the Piersols and Piersol Bond Company dictated to the court reporter a motion for a new trial, but did not sign it and it was not transcribed and filed in the office of the court clerk. Motions for a new trial were overruled, and, all parties gave notice of appeal. Cross-petitioner in error C. S. Highsmith and defendant in error Jackson county now move the court to dismiss Ihe appeal of plaintiffs in error George W. Piersol. J. E. Piersol, and the piersol Bond Company ,00 the ground that motion for a new trial was not reduced to writing and filed in the office of the court clerk as provided by section 575, Compiled Oklahoma Statutes, 1921.

The motion for a new trial appears nowhere in the record except as transcribed in case-made by the court reporter, from h>s ■notes of the record made by him of the proceedings had. A motion for a new trial is a motion in writing filed in the office of the clerk and is copied by the court reporter into case-made just as he copies anv other paper in a case on-file in the clerk’s office, and there is no way by which a motion for a new trial may become part of the record on appeal where the same is not reduced to writing and deposited with ihe clerk of the trial court. If a motion for a new trial may he dictated to the court reporter and transcribed into case-made, instead of being transcribed and deposited an the clerk’s of-' fice and copied into the record, the statute Is a nullity and imposes no duty whatever.

■Section 575, Compiled Oklahoma Statutes 1921, is as follows:

‘‘The application must be by motion, upon written grounds, .filed at the time of making the motion. The causes enumerated in subdivisions two, three, seven and nine of sec-' tion 5033, must be sustained by affidavits, showing their truth, and may be controverted by affidavits.”

In Singer v. Ooley et al., 112 Okla. 28, 239 Pac. 594, in an opinion by Mr. Commissioner Thread-gill, the court used ihis language:

“The order of the court overruling the motion for new trial, which is not on file at- the time the order is made, is a nullity, the exception taken a ’nullity, and the notice of incention to appeal without force and effect to give this court jurisdiction to consider the appeal on the merits.”'

The Kansas statute is identical with ours, and the Supreme Court! of that state in construing it in Douglas v. Insley et al., 9 Pac. 475, said:

“Where the record does not show that a motion lor a new trial was ever reduced to writing, or filed in the court, as prescribed by section 309, of ihe Code, it will be presumed by the Supreme Court, for the purpose of upholding the judgment of the trial court, that the motion was not in writing and filed as it should have been.”

In Joiner v. Goldsmith, 25 Okla. 840, 107 Pac. 733, and Allen v. Gates, 38 Okla. 408, 134 Pac. 51, this court held that the section of the statute (now sec. 574, C. O. S. 1921) which provides that motions for a new trial must be filed within 3 d-ays after verdict or decision except unavoidably prevented is mandatory, and so is the section under co»n-’ sideration in ihe instant case. What is the legal acceptation of filing a paper, a motion, or pleading? Words and Phrases (Second Series) p. 531, defines it as follows:

“There can be no filing of a paper in a legal sense except by its delivery to an official whose duly it is to file papers and who is required to keep and maintain an office or other public place for their deposit, and the paper must either he delivered personally to such officer with the intent that the same shall lie filed by him or delivered at the place where the same should be filed.”

The requirements of the statute have not been mot, and its plain provisions leave no discretion in the court as to how it should be construed and applied.

The appeal is dismissed.

Reference

Full Case Name
PIERSOL, Et Al. v. STATE Ex Rel. County Atty. of Jackson County
Cited By
9 cases
Status
Published