Atkinson v. Maris

81 N.E. 745, 40 Ind. App. 718, 1907 Ind. App. LEXIS 132
CourtIndiana Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 25, 1907
DocketNo. 6,029
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 81 N.E. 745 (Atkinson v. Maris) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Atkinson v. Maris, 81 N.E. 745, 40 Ind. App. 718, 1907 Ind. App. LEXIS 132 (Ind. Ct. App. 1907).

Opinion

Rabb, J.

The appellants filed a claim in the court below against the estate of appellee’s intestate. The claim was put 'at issue, and a jury trial had, resulting in a verdict in favor of appellee. The appellants’ appeal to this court was not perfected within ten days, as is prescribed by §2978 Burns 1908, Acts 1899, p. 397, but under the provisions of the law the appellants petitioned this court for leave to appeal within one year after the decision. The appellee was given ten days’ notice of the presentation of the petition, and appeared in this court and resisted the granting of the same, setting forth a multitude of grounds for dismissing appellants’ petition. The matter of granting the petition was heard and determined by this court on February 6, 1906, and the prayer of the petition granted, upon condition that the appellants file their appeal bond with the clerk of the Orange Circuit Court, in a penalty of $750, with the Title Guaranty & Trust Company as surety thereon. The appellants perfected their appeal by filing the bond, as prescribed by the order of the court, with the clerk of the Orange Circuit Court, and by filing in this court a duly certified transcript of the proceedings of the court below within one year from the rendition of the judgment, with a proper assignment of errors.

.1. The first question confronting the court in this case arises on appellees’ motion to dismiss the appeal. Forty distinct reasons for the motion are assigned in appellee’s petition.' The greater part of these reasons were presented to the court in resisting appellants ’ motion for [721]*721leave to appeal. These reasons, if sufficient on appellee’s motion to dismiss, were equally potential to the granting of leave to appeal. The appellee, after appearing to the motion for leave to appeal, and having there presented to the court for its consideration and determination these matters, as he had a right to do in opposition to the granting of such leave, is concluded by the decision on that motion, and cannot again present them here. A motion to dismiss an appeal presents no meritorious question, and this court will not consider, on a motion to dismiss, grounds or reasons that have been' once passed upon by the court and adjudged insufficient for refusing the right to appeal. To do otherwise the court would stultify itself, and subject itself to the charge of trifling with the rights of the parties; and we refuse, therefore, again to consider on this motion to dismiss appellants’ appeal any question presented, or which might properly have been presented by appellee in opposition to appellants’ petition for leave to appeal. Duncan v. Gainey (1886), 108 Ind. 579.

2. Causes twenty-six, thirty-seven and thirty-eight, set forth in appellee’s motion to dismiss the appeal, would, if true, require the dismissal of the appeal. They state as a fact that no leave to appeal this cause was granted by this court. If such was the case the cause would not properly be on the docket.

3. It is averred that what purports to be the order granting the appeal was an order made by one of the members of the court, in chambers, and not by the court, in session, or concurred in by a majority of the members of the court. These facts are substantiated by the affidavit of one of the attorneys for the appellee. The Appellate Court is a court of record, and its proceedings are proved by the record and not by the affidavit of lawyers. Its records import absolute verity, and how any well-informed attorney, having regard for the ethics of his profession, could have the assurance to tender to this court his sworn [722]*722statement as proof of its proceedings, against the record and the absolute and accurate knowledge of the individual members of the court, is incomprehensible. Not only is this statement in appellee’s motion contrary to the record, but it is known to be false as a matter of fact by two members of the court, who were sitting at the time the leave to appeal was granted.

4. It was not necessary or proper that appellants should file in the office of the clerk of the Supreme. Court a transcript of the record for the purpose of perfecting the appeal, and assign errors thereon, until after the court had granted leave to appeal, and there is but one transcript in the case. Appellants’ brief refers frequently to the “original” transcript.

5. The original and only transcript that governs the court, and to which the court can look in the determination of questions arising on the appeal, is the transcript filed after leave was granted to appeal, and this, the record shows, was filed February 9, 1906, and this record imports absolute verity, and cannot be disputed by affidavit.

6. The twenty-eighth reason for the dismissal is disputed by the record. The fact that the record of the court below had been corrected so as to speak the truth is no ground for a dismissal of the appeal. This correction was so made before the transcript was filed in this court. It might have been made after the transcript had been filed here, and properly brought into the transcript by a writ of certiorari. The record in this court shows that upon the proper petition of appellants, to which appellee appeared, leave was granted appellants to appeal this cause within one year, on the filing of a bond, with surety, and in a certain sum named. The bond was filed as provided by the order, and within the year from the date of the rendition of judgment in the court below a duly certified transcript of the record, with the proper assignments of error, was filed with [723]*723■the clerk of this court. The case is properly here, and no sufficient reason is shown for the dismissal of the appeal. The only error properly assigned is the action of the court below in overruling appellants’ motion for a new trial. The reasons for a new trial urged here as grounds for the reversal of the judgment are the giving by the court of certain instructions, and the exclusion by the court of certain evidence tendered by the appellants. Appellee earnestly insists that these questions are not properly saved in the record, and, if properly saved, they do not constitute reversible error, because the record affirmatively shows that they did not affect the result of the trial.

7. The claim is made by appellee that the bill of exceptions setting out the parts of the evidence was not filed in the clerk’s office of the Orange Circuit Court within the time given by the court for that purpose. It was not essential that the bill of exceptions should be filed in the office of the clerk below within the ninety days given by the court to file bills of exceptions. It was only necessary that it should be presented to the judge for his examination and signature within the time specified. The authorities cited by appellee so declare, and this is the express provision of the statute. The bill of exceptions in this case shows affirmatively that it was so presented within the proper time.

8. The claim is also made that inasmuch as the bill of exceptions does not purport to set out all the evidence given in the cause, nor purport to present a reserved question of law, under §669 Burns 1908, §630 R. S. 1881, no question can be raised upon the evidence.

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Bluebook (online)
81 N.E. 745, 40 Ind. App. 718, 1907 Ind. App. LEXIS 132, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/atkinson-v-maris-indctapp-1907.