Board of Com'rs. v. Casper Nat. Bank

96 P.2d 564, 96 P.2d 664, 55 Wyo. 144, 1939 Wyo. LEXIS 42
CourtWyoming Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 12, 1939
Docket2132, 2133
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 96 P.2d 564 (Board of Com'rs. v. Casper Nat. Bank) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wyoming Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Board of Com'rs. v. Casper Nat. Bank, 96 P.2d 564, 96 P.2d 664, 55 Wyo. 144, 1939 Wyo. LEXIS 42 (Wyo. 1939).

Opinion

*147 Riner, Chief Justice.

*148 These causes are before the court at this time upon the motions of the several defendants in error to affirm the judgments or dismiss the petitions in error and the proceedings instituted thereunder. The grounds of the motions being the same they will be considered together. The arguments had and briefs submitted were in large measure devoted to the proposition that this court is without jurisdiction to review the judgments rendered by the district court of Natrona County, Wyoming, and appearing in the records presented here, because, as disclosed thereby, said judgments “were entered in favor of the defendants in error in said causes, respectively, by the said District Court on the 23rd day of November, 1938, and that the motions for new trials, interposed by the plaintiffs in error were not determined until the 27th day of January, 1939, more than sixty days after the entering of the judgments by the said District Court”; that the hearings on said motions for a new trial were not continued by orders of said district court or by stipulation, and that the only assignments of error made by plaintiffs in error are the overruling of the motions for a new trial. Since the jurisdiction of the court is thus drawn in question we deem it best to consider that ground of the several motions first.

The contentions of the parties regarding these matters center upon the effect to be given Chapter 112, Laws of Wyoming, 1935, entitled “An Act in regard to motions for new trials in a District Court and providing for procedure to be followed so as to avoid unnecessary delay,” and reading:

“Motions for new trial shall be determined within sixty days after the rendition of judgment, and if not so determined shall be deemed denied, unless continued by order of the court, or by stipulation”;

in connection with Rule 13 of this Court, as amended *149 August 14, 1923, whose language at present is verbatim :

“Nothing which could have been properly assigned as a ground for a new trial in the court below will be considered in this court in an appellate proceeding brought by the filing of a petition in error and known as a proceeding in error, unless it shall appear that the same was properly presented to the court below by a motion for a new trial, and that such motion was overruled and exception was at the time reserved to such ruling; all of which shall be embraced in the bill of exceptions. The ruling of the court below upon each matter presented by a motion for a new trial shall be sufficiently questioned in this court by an assignment that the court below erred in overruling such motion for a new trial.”

The amendment made in the rule in 1923 was merely the insertion of the words “in an appellate proceeding brought by the filing of a petition in error and known as a proceeding in error.” This amendment was promulgated in consequence of the adoption some years before (Laws of Wyoming 1917, Chapter 32) of the additional method of review of causes by this Court, now generally known to the profession in this State as “the direct appeal” method of obtaining an appellate consideration of judgments rendered by the district courts in this jurisdiction. Prior to 1923 the rule, aside from the amendment aforesaid had stood in the language quoted for several decades as a cardinal rule of practice governing a proceeding in error. See Freeburgh v. Lamoureux, 12 Wyo. 41, 73 P. 545, and cases cited.

Defendants in error, by their motions aforesaid, insist that in view of the statute quoted above and the rule aforesaid, which as may be observed was unquestionably adopted with no thought of such a statute in mind, the plaintiff in error may not secure a review of the respective judgments involved in the instant *150 litigation through the pending proceedings in error, and they base their position upon the following facts of record now to be recited: In the submitted bills of exceptions signed and certified as true and correct by Judge Harry P. Ilsley of the Sixth Judicial District, sitting by assignment in the stead of Judge C. D. Murane of the Seventh Judicial District, where the causes arose and were tried, the date when the several motions for new trial were filed is set forth, viz., November 29, 1938, and the motions last mentioned were, omitting titles, incorporated therein verbatim. It also appears from the same source that Judge Ilsley did not rule upon said motions for a new trial until January 27, 1939, more than sixty days after the rendition of the judgments in question, but that on that date he made orders denying said motions, to which orders plaintiff in error duly saved its exceptions. No formal orders of court or stipulations, as contemplated by the quoted statute, to secure continuances in the matter of deciding said motions for new trial beyond the sixty day period, seem to have been obtained or sought.

The difficulty arises in these causes because of the provision in the law that unless a continuance is had in the manner indicated, the motions “shall be deemed denied,” and because of the peculiar provisions of Rule 13 recited above.

Statutes of this kind in substance have been enacted in a number of States of the Union, and, without undertaking to be exhaustive, we may mention the commonwealths of Montana, California, Oregon, Wisconsin, Arizona, Alabama and Colorado. The enactment of such laws is evidently with the idea of expediting court business and preventing trial judges from keeping motions for new trial under advisement for an unreasonable length of time. Statutes of this character have generally been held to be mandatory. Nendel v. Meyers (Or.) 94 P. (2d) 680. Under such statutory *151 provisions if a motion for a new trial is not determined within the time fixed by the law, it is deemed denied constructively or by operation of statute.

It is urged for the defendants in error that no exceptions were taken as required by our Rule 13 aforesaid concerning court orders overruling motions for new trial, this statement being made evidently with relation to the operation of the statute here involved.

Section 89-2001 W. R. S., 1931, defines an exception thus:

“An exception is an objection taken to a decision of the court upon a matter of law.”

It is familiar law that the purpose of an exception or objection to a court ruling is, of course, to advise the court at the time that its ruling will not be accepted as final, so that such ruling may be corrected by the court, if upon further consideration the ruling be deemed improper, and that said ruling will be challenged either by again calling it to the court’s attention or by appealing to another tribunal.

It is quite obvious that an exception is not appropriate to be applied to a situation where no order of court whatsoever is made but the motion for a new trial is disposed of constructively or by operation of law. In such case the court does not act at all; the statute itself denies the motion. But if it should be said, as was done in Notbohm v. Pallange, 168 Wis. 225, 169 N. W.

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Bluebook (online)
96 P.2d 564, 96 P.2d 664, 55 Wyo. 144, 1939 Wyo. LEXIS 42, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/board-of-comrs-v-casper-nat-bank-wyo-1939.