Bowers v. Ross

55 Miss. 213
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 15, 1877
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 55 Miss. 213 (Bowers v. Ross) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bowers v. Ross, 55 Miss. 213 (Mich. 1877).

Opinion

Simrall, C. J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

It is objected by the defendant in error that we are pre-cluded from reviewing the proceedings and judgment on the last trial,, because two new trials had been granted. We are referred to section 647 of the Code : “ And no more than two new trials shall be granted to either party in the same cause.” The next succeeding section allows a bill of exceptions to the refusal or the granting of a new trial; on which ■error may be assigned. The closing section is: “And the Supreme Court shall have power to grant new trials, or to correct any errors of the Circuit Court in granting or refusing the same.” This manifestly is subject to the prohibition of the preceding section; for, if the Circuit Court is forbidden by statute from granting a third trial, error could not be predicated of its refusal to do so.

Counsel for plaintiff in error has argued that, although that may be true, ho is entitled to a review of all the questions reserved by special bills of exceptions taken on the trial. If the Circuit Court would not award a third new trial, a bill of exceptions taken to its ruling on that question, for the purpose ■of review in this court, cannot be considered by us for any purpose whatever. We must be confined to the special bills in considering the rulings therein complained of.

The bill of exceptions has no other function than to certify some ruling or action of the inferior court to the appellate court, for the purpose of review. It becomes part of the record for that purpose, and that alone. It would seem to follow, then, that if error cannot be predicated of a particular ruling, because the statute has denied power to the original court to do that particular thing, the bill of exceptions would be coram non judice, and would not present a question for review. Such is undoubtedly the rule established by our decisions. The very point was ruled in Hay v. McCreary, 26 Miss. 407. Because the circuit judge had no power to hear the motion for a new trial,, “he for the same reason had no power to sign a bill of exceptions, on refusing to grant a new [220]*220trial.” To the same effect is Thornton v. Railroad Co., 29 Miss. 145, 146; Garnett v. Kirkman, 33 Miss. 395, 396.

At common law the effect of a motion for a new trial was to-waive all special exceptions reserved by bills of exception. Our statute, allowing a review of the decision of the Circuit Court on the application for new trial, has not been construed to operate as a relinquishment of special exceptions-taken on the trial. But if the court has the case before it, brought up from a refusal to grant a new trial, it may on the-whole case affirm the judgment, although there may have been errors on the trial; for it may appear that such errors have-been cured or waived, or that they were harmless.

The case of Garnett v. Kirkman, 33 Miss. 395, 396, is precisely like this — two new trials had been granted to the plaintiff in error, and the circuit judge had sealed a bill of exceptions to the decision refusing him a third trial. Special bills had also been allowed to rulings on the trial on points of evidence, and instructions to the jury. It was argued for the plaintiff in this court that inasmuch as he had had two verdicts-set aside, and new trials granted, this court had no jurisdiction-over the case for any purpose ; but it was held that the prohibition of the statute did not apply as to those exceptions-specially reserved, and that if those rulings thus specially excepted to were erroneous, this court could so pronounce, notwithstanding there had been two new trials. Ray v. McCreary, 26 Miss. 404. The law has been considered as settled by these decisions.

We proceed to consider whether there is error predicated of the several special bills of exception. The first assignment affirms error in the refusal of the Circuit Court to give the second request of instruction, as propounded, for the plaintiffs, and also in the modification of it. It was : “If the jury believe from the evidence that Ross, the defendant, broke up his abode in Bolivar County, Mississippi, to remove with his family to Arkansas, or Texas, and to remaim abroad so long as the condition of things which induced his removal con[221]*221tinued, and that he was living in Wood County, Texas, at the-date of the suing out of the attachment, farming, and had1 made two or three crops there, then the jury will find the-issue joined for the plaintiff.” The court declined to give it in that form, but modified it by adding immediately following-the words “ two or .more crops there,” “ so that the ordinary-process of law could not be served on him.” No testimony is contained in the bill of exceptions to enable us to determine whether it was applicable to any phase of the case before the jury. We must, therefore, test the modification of the request by the rule — more than once recognized as sound in this court — namely, whether the charge, in any conceivable state of facts that might have been in evidence under the-issue, was correct.

Submitting the instruction to that test, we may suppose that the plaintiff, Bowers, administrator, etc., was attempting to maintain the truth of Ms affidavit that Ross was a “ non-resiident,” because he had abandoned his domicile in this state- and removed with his family to Texas, and there acquired a-fixed abode, though uncertain as to its duration, but all the while meditated a return so soon as the exigency which in-duced his removal had passed away. Suppose, by such facts as-these, the creditor was attempting to make out a case of non-residence within the sense of the attachment law, although the ■ legal domicile and citizenship was all the while in this state ; the fact of whether the debtor, Ross, was amenable to the ordinary process of law is pertinent to the issue, and may be a-pregnant circumstance in influencing the result.

When this case was before this court in 1878, this language-was used in its opinion: “These propositions rest'on authority that, witMn the statute, to be a non-resident, the debtor must acquire abroad a fixed, established abode, either for business or other motive — it may be indefinite and uncertain as to duration; and that because of such non-residence, although the legal, domicile and citizenship may be here, yet’ the debtor cannot be reached by the ordinary legal remedy ; so-[222]*222that the only remedy open to the creditor is by attachment.” The authorities then referred to in part are : Crawford v. Wilson, 21 Barb. 504; Foster v. Brislew, 19 Wend. 14; In re Thompson, 1 Wend. 43; McKennan v. Massingill, 6 Smed. & M. 377; and Alston v. Newcomer & Kausler, 42 Miss. 192. In the last case cited, the court said in reference to the debtor, who had removed and taken up a temporary residence in another state: “The intention (of the statute) was to give a remedy to creditors whose debtors were not amenable to ordinary process.” One of the most weighty considerations in Alston v. Newcomer & Kausler, and in this case when formerly before this court on error predicated of the refusal of the new trial, in considering whether the respective defendants were liable to attachment, was that there was no remedy by personal action, because they had no “ abodes ” in this state, so that process might be served in one of the modes pei’mitted by the statute.

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Bluebook (online)
55 Miss. 213, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bowers-v-ross-miss-1877.