Baltimore Building Ass'n No. 2 v. Grant

41 Md. 560, 1875 Md. LEXIS 73
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedMarch 5, 1875
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 41 Md. 560 (Baltimore Building Ass'n No. 2 v. Grant) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Baltimore Building Ass'n No. 2 v. Grant, 41 Md. 560, 1875 Md. LEXIS 73 (Md. 1875).

Opinion

Bartor, C. J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

In this caso the judgment was rendered on the verdict of the jury, upon the 10th day of February, 1874. The bill [564]*564of exceptions appears to have been signed and sealed on the first day of May, 1874. It has been contended on the part of the appellee, that it was then too late, and that therefore there is no sufficient bill of exceptions before us, and in support of this position we have been referred to Walton vs. U. States, 9 Wheaton, 651; Ex parte Bradstreet, 4 Peters, 102 ; and Phelps vs. Mayer, 15 Howard, 160. In Walton vs. U. States, the bill of exceptions stated that the evidence was objected to at the trial, hut did not state that any exception was then taken to the decision of the Court. The Supreme Court after adverting to this fact, say, i£But the' more material consideration is, that the bill of exceptions itself appears on the record not to have been taken at all, until after judgment. It is a settled principle, that no hill of exceptions is valid, which is not for matter excepted to at the trial. ’ ’

The Court then add. ££We do not mean to say that it is necessary, (and in point of practice we know it to be otherwise,) that the bill of exceptions should be formally drawn and signed, before the trial is at an end. It will be sufficient, if the • exception be taken at the trial, and noted by the Court, with the requisite certainty; and it may, afterwards, during' the term, according to the rules of the Court, be reduced to form and signed by the Judge; and so in fact is the general practice. But in all such cases the bill of exceptions is s’gned nunc pro tunc; and it purports on its face to be the same, as if actually reduced to form, and signed pending the trial. And it would be a fatal error, if it were to appear otherwise ; for the original authority under which bills of exception are allowed, has always been considered to be restricted to matters of exception, taken pending the trial, and ascertained before the verdict.”

In Ex partePr ad-street, which was an application for a mandamus, requiring the inferior Court to sign a bill of exceptions, tendered by counsel, Chief Justice Marshall, [565]*565wlio delivered the opinion of the Court said: “ The Court will observe, that there is something in this proceeding which they cannot, and which they ought not to sanction. A bill of exceptions is handed to the Judge several weeks after the trial of the cause, and he is asked to correct it from memory. The law requires that a hill of exceptions should be tendered at the trial. But the usual practice is to request the Judge to note down in writing the exceptions, and afterwards, during the session of the Court, to hand him the bill of exceptions, and submit it to his correction from his notes. If he is to resort to memory, it should be handed to him immediately, or in a reasonable time after the trial. Tt would be dangerous to allow a bill of exceptions of matters dependent upon memory, at a distant period, when he may not accurately recollect them. And the Judge ought not to allow it.”

“If the party intends to take a hill of exceptions, he should give notice to the Judge at the trial; and if he does not file it at the trial, he should move the Judge to assign a reasonable time within which he may file it. A practice to sign it after the term must be understood to be a matter of consent between the parties, unless the Judge has made an express order in the term, allowing such a period to prepare it.”

In Phelps vs. Mayer, which came up on writ of error, for the purpose of reviewing the ruling of the Court below in granting certain instructions and refusing others, it appeared that “no exception was taken to them idhile the jury remained at the bar. The verdict was rendered on the 13th of December, and the next day, the plaintiff came into Court and filed his exception. There was nothing in the certificate from which it could be inferred that the exception was reserved pending the trial and before the jury retired.” Objection was made that the exception was too late, and the Court held that the «bjection was fatal.

[566]*566Chief Justice Taney, speaking for the Court said it has been repeatedly decided ‘£ that it must appear by the transcript, not only that the instructions were given or refused at the trial, but also that the party who complains of them excepted to them while the jury were at the bar. The Statute of Westminister 2nd, which provides for the proceeding by exception requires, in explicit terms, that this should be done; and if it is not done, the charge of the Court or its refusal to charge as requested, form no part of the record, and cannot be carried before tire appellate Court by writ of error. It need not be drawn out in form and signed before the jury retire; but it must be taken in open Court, and must appear by the certificate of the Judge who authenticates it, to have been so taken. Nor is this a mere formal or technical provision. It was introduced and is adhered to for purposes of justice. For if it is brought to the attention of the Court that one of the parties excepts to his opinion, he has an opportunity of reconsidering or explaining it more fully to the jury. And if the exception is to evidence, the opposite party might be able to remove it by further testimony, if apprised of it in time.” The learned Chief Justice refers to Sheppard vs. Wilson, 6 Sow., 275, where the same rule is affirmed.

We have quoted at some length the language of those great jurists ; because it expresses in a clear and forcible manner the true rule of practice with regard to the taking of bills of exceptions. But in our judgment the decisions cited do not support the objection made to the bill of exceptions in this case. It plainly appears from the certificate that the exception was in fact taken pending the trial, and as soon as the ruling of the Court upon the prayers was announced. This distinguishes the present case from Walton vs. U. States, and Phelps vs. Mayer. It appears from the certificate that the formal bill of exceptions was signed by the Judge on the 1st of May, 1874, [567]*567sometime after the judgment. How there is nothing to show that it was not then competent for the Judge to sign it; no rule of Court is produced to the contrary; and the presumption is that it was done by consent of parties, or in accordance with the leave of the Court before given allowing time for its preparation. If it had been dated as of the day when the exception was taken and signed nunc pro tunc, in accordance with the usual practice, no objection could be made on account of its being actually signed on a subsequent day. In our judgment the omission of the Judge to sign it nunc pro tunc, cannot have the effect of making it invalid. The rule as explained in Phelps vs. Mayer, rests upon substantial reason, and cannot he invoked in support of a mere technical or formal objection of this kind. We think the bill of exceptions is sufficient; and we shall therefore proceed to the consideration of the questions which it presents, these arise upon the prayers.

The facts of the case are briefly as follows : On the 7th of July, 1869, the appellant executed its note for $500, payable six mouths after date, to the order of John C. Foster. On the 3rd of August, 1869, Foster endorsed the note, passed it to Young O. Wilson, and executed a mortgage to secure its payment.

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Bluebook (online)
41 Md. 560, 1875 Md. LEXIS 73, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/baltimore-building-assn-no-2-v-grant-md-1875.