Alexander v. Weidner

82 Pa. 452, 1876 Pa. LEXIS 251
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedOctober 30, 1876
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 82 Pa. 452 (Alexander v. Weidner) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Alexander v. Weidner, 82 Pa. 452, 1876 Pa. LEXIS 251 (Pa. 1876).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Sharswood

delivered the opinion of the court, October 30th 1876.

The Act of Assembly of February 24th 1806, Pamph. L. 334, entitled “ An act to alter the judiciary system of this Commonwealth,” with another which followed close upon its heels, the Act of March 21st 1806, Pamph. L. 558, entitled “ An act to regulate arbitrations and proceedings in courts of justice,” were intended by that legislature to inaugurate a new administration of justice, in which the profession of the law might be entirely dispensed with, and every man be his own lawyer and conduct his own suits. It need not be said that it entirely failed to secure its main object, and that the only class of men benefited by it was that at whose business it was aimed. An abundant harvest of litigation followed, and its deleterious influence has left many marks upon our jurisprudence which still remain to impede and embarrass the speedy and regular course of justice in civil proceedings. “ Of the object of these acts,” says Chief Justice Gibson, in Wike v. Lightner, 1 [454]*454Rawle 290, “ those who remember the temper of the times can best judge.” Speaking of the 25th section of the Act of February 24th 1806, to be presently referred to, Mr. Justice Duncan, in 1828, remarked in Brown v. Caldwell, 10 S. & R. 114: “ The act making it the duty of courts, on the request of either party, to reduce their opinion with the reasons to writing and file it of record, has been found very inconvenient in practice, however beautiful in theory; and though the provision appears, on first sight, very simple, yet experience has shown it to be not a little complex. It has instead of easing the suitor proved a source of vexation, perplexity and delay, and sometimes of actual injustice. It requires legislative interposition, either by its total abolition or pruning many of the luxuriant branches which have grown from it and choked the progress to the termination of controversies. The bill of exceptions, its form, its bearing, were well understood and quite adequate to spreading on the record all legal points decided by the courts in their instructions to juries.” So Chief Justice Tilghman, in Reigart v. Ellmaker, 14 S. & R. 124, speaking of the same section, observed: ££ This provision, though undoubtedly intended for a good purpose, has produced consequences of which the legislature was not aware when it was passed. It may have done some good, but on the whole it is the general sentiment that it has caused much trouble, expense and delay, and thrown many obstructions in the way of a speedy and fair administration of justice.” The opinions of these very eminent jurists, however, have produced no effect upon the legislature. Not only does the Act of 1806 stand unrepealed on the statute book, but it has been extended by the Act of April 15th 1856, Pamph. L. 337, so as to require that the president judge, ££ at the request of any party or attorney concerned, shall reduce the whole opinion and charge of the court as delivered to the jury to writing at the time of delivery of the same, and shall forthwith file the same of record.” This had been held by this court not to be required by the Act of 1806, in Reigart v. Ellmaker, 14 S. & R. 121, and Munderbach v. Lutz, Id. 125. It will not add much to the weight of these opinions to say that I entirely concur with them, but I may be permitted to add that I sat for nearly twenty-three years in a court to which these acts were held not to apply. During all that time I never filed a written opinion or charge, nor was there ever found to be any necessity for it; the old well known remedy by bill of exceptions, via trita, via tuta, administering ample remedy to the suitors against the mistakes of the court upon points of law.

These two Acts of 1806 and 1856 both expressly require that there should be a request by one or other of the parties before the judge’s charge can become a part of the record. In Brown v. Caldwell, 10 S. & R. 114, this court held that this request need not appear of record, because, where the1 opinion signed by the [455]*455judge is on file, the court could not suppose that it was his own voluntary, officious act, without request of either party, but must presume it to be his official act done by request at the time. It matters not which party requested it. It is of record, and consequently the subject of revision. This case was, however, overruled by 000Lancaster v. De Normandie, 1 Whart. 49, in which it was held that this court will not consider any paper annexed to the record as furnishing the opinion of the court below, under the Act of 1806, unless it a0lso appear by the record that the paper was filed at the request of one of the parties or of his counsel. The vexation and inconvenience of the practice, so faithfully depicted” (in Brown v. Caldwell), said Chief Justice Gibson, “ subsequently forced the court in various instances to exact a rigid compliance with the requirements of the act, and settle the practice differently.” As the act authorizes nothing which it does not enjoin, when there has been no request it gives no authority to put the matter on the record at all. It never was intended to permit the judge to set before the parties gratuitous incitements to appellate litigation, by exposing on the record errors which had escaped their notice at the time. Even restrained to its legitimate uses, the .proceeding has been found sufficiently prolific of vexatious and unprofitable contest. By the express terms of the act the judge has authority to file his opinion of record, but at the request of a party desiring to have advantage from it; and when he does it of his own head he makes nothing matter of record which was not so before.” This point, say the court in Bratton v. Mitchell, 5 Watts 71, “ is not now open to question.”

It has been urged that the Act of 1856, by the repetition of the word “ shall” before the word file,” dispensed with any request to file, and that this difference between the words of that act and those of the Act of 1806 was designed by the legislature. We cannot perceive any plausibility, much less force, in this contention. The preliminary request limits the entire sentence; but if it were so, it certainly would not avail, according to the authorities, unless the request to reduce to writing also appears of record. The learned counsel appears to think that an exception’ amounts to a request to file. That would be pushing construction beyond all reasonable limits, and it would be much better to return to the overruled doctrine of Brown v. Caldwell, that a request is in every case to be presumed.

Under these acts and the judicial construction which they have received, this plaintiff in error has no standing in this court. On the trial below, the defendant, the present plaintiff in error, put certain points to the court in writing, to the answers to which he did not except. The opposite party, however, did. The answers of the court were filed, but the record does not show that they were filed at the request of either party-. They are therefore no part of [456]*456the record on which this plaintiff can assign error, and he certainly cannot avail himself of the exception of the opposite party.

It would not be right to dismiss this case without adverting to the 3d section of the Act of April 17th 1856 (Pamph. L. 396).

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Bluebook (online)
82 Pa. 452, 1876 Pa. LEXIS 251, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/alexander-v-weidner-pa-1876.