Cain v. King

1915 OK 1077, 153 P. 1133, 49 Okla. 594, 1915 Okla. LEXIS 93
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedDecember 21, 1915
Docket6081
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 1915 OK 1077 (Cain v. King) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cain v. King, 1915 OK 1077, 153 P. 1133, 49 Okla. 594, 1915 Okla. LEXIS 93 (Okla. 1915).

Opinion

HARDY, J.

Defendant in error files motion to dismiss for the reason that case-made herein was signed and settled by a judge pro tempore after the time fixed for suggesting amendments in the last valid order of extension had expired. From the record it appears that judgment was rendered on August 21, 1913, before Hon. Edgar Anderson, a judge pro tempore of the county court of Rogers county, and on said date an extension of 40 days was allowed by said judge pro tempore to prepare and serve case-made, with ten days thereafter to suggest amendments, and case to be settled upon five days’ notice ’ in writing by either party. On September 26, 1913, the regular county judge of Rogers county extended the time to and inclusive of October 15, 1913, in which to prepare and serve case-made, with ten days to suggest amndments, and same to be settled upon five days’ written notice. The . case-made was duly served on October 11, 1913, and on October 21, 1913, counsel waived the right to suggest amendments and stipulated that-the case-made was true and correct, and same was signed and settled by said judge pro tempore on November 12, 1913.

In support of the motion to dismiss, counsel cite the previous decisions of this court' in City of Shawnee v. *596 State Pub. Co., 33 Okla. 363, 125 Pac. 462, 42 L. R. A. (N. S.) 616, Co-Operative Gin & Ele. Co. v. Asbury, 40. Okla. 141, 142 Pac. 802, and Cantwell v. Patterson [not reported]. This last opinion has been withheld from publication in the permanent volume of the Reports. These decisions support the contention of counsel for defendant in error. We are constrained, however, owing to the importance of this question of procedure, which is constantly recurring, to re-examine this question, and to determine whether the conclusion announced in these cases is supported by sound reason and logic, and if not, to declare a just and correct rule that will govern cases of this character hereafter. These decisions appear to have followed the Kansas rule which was first announced by that court in Mfg. Co. v. Stoddard, 61 Kan. 640, 60 Pac. 320, which was rendered in March, 1900, and which referred to the case of K. & C. P. Ry. Co. v. Wright, 53 Kan. 272, 36 Pac. 331, as authority for the doctrine therein announced.

The opinion in the Wright Case, upon examination, discloses the fact that the judge in that case was a regularly elected district judge whose term of - office had expired, and it was held that, as no time was fixed for settling and signing the case, he had no authority to settle and sign the same after his term of office had expired. That case was not tried by a judge pro tempore, and the holding therein had no reference to the authority of á judge pro tempore, nor did it affect any act done or power exercised by such judge.

The doctrine announced in Mfg. Co. v. Stoddard, supra, was reaffirmed in Ry. Co. v. Preston, 63 Kan. 819, 66 Pac. 1050, by a divided court, and has since been followed in that jurisdiction. The opinion of the court in. *597 the Preston Case was concurred in by four of the justices, while three dissented. In his concurring opinion, Ellis, J., expressly placed his assent to the holding in that case on the ground that the rule announced had been followed by the court for some years, and that it was better to continue that policy than to overrule the former decisions, stating, however, that as an original proposition he would incline to the view that a judge pro tempore might settle and sign a case-made at any time within a year of the trial, that being the limit fixed by statute in that state. Thus it is seen that the doctrine in that case, while adopted by a bare majority of the court, was not considered the sound or correct policy by at least four of the seven justices. Pollock, J., in a vigorous dissenting opinion criticized the rule in very strong terms. The rule, while followed in this state, has not met with the approbation of the court, but on the contrary has been criticized on more than one occasion.'

In City of Shawnee v. State Pub. Co., supra (decided July 23, 1912), Mr. Justice Hayes, in writing the opinion, said:

“The writer of this opinion, uncontrolled by the former decisions of this court and of the Supreme Court of Kansas, from which state our statute of procedure has been adopted, is of the opinion that the sounder and more just rule and the one supported by the best reason is that the power of a judge pro tempore, selected dr appointed to try a cause in which the regular judge is disqualified, does not cease at the end of the trial, but that his power continues with sufficient authority in him to make any and all orders necessary for the final disposition of the cause, including any order that may be necessary for lodging the case in the appellate court.”

*598 After setting out the various provisions of the Constitution and the statute with reference to the selection of judges pro tempore, Mr. Justice Hayes continues:

“Accurately speaking, a judge pro tempore has no term of office. He is selected for a definite purpose, to-wit, to try a cause in which the regular judge is disqualified. The statute does not attempt to fix his term; nor does he take the term of office of the regular judge, who continues as the regular judge of the court with full authority in all cases except the one in which he is disqualified. The judge pro tempore becomes clqthed with all the power of the regular judge as to such cause, necessary for him to hear .such cause and render judgment therein; and when the case has been tried and judgment rendered, his powers cease, unless continued by some order of the court.”

This opinion by Mr. Justice Hayes is the first time this rule had been announced by this court, and is based upon the assumption that prior decisions by this court and the decisions from Kansas cited in the opinion, construing the Kansas statute, were controlling upon the court here.

This view, however, we think is erroneous. Our statute was adopted in 1893, while the opinion in the Wright Case, which formed the basis of this holding, was rendered, at the January .term, 1894. That case, however, as has been, seen, did not involve a judge pro tempore, but involved a regular district judge whose term of office had expired. The first definite declaration of the rule in Kansas was in Mfg. Co. v. Stoddard, supra, rendered at the January term, 1900, more than seven years after the' adoption of our statute, and these decisions therefore cannot be considered controlling on this court under the rule that where, statutes are adopted from another state the construction placed thereon by the highest court of *599 that state is incorporated in and becomes a part of the statute, and is adopted therewith.

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1915 OK 1077, 153 P. 1133, 49 Okla. 594, 1915 Okla. LEXIS 93, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cain-v-king-okla-1915.