Central Coal & Coke Co. v. Graham

196 S.W. 940, 129 Ark. 550, 1917 Ark. LEXIS 671
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedJune 18, 1917
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 196 S.W. 940 (Central Coal & Coke Co. v. Graham) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Central Coal & Coke Co. v. Graham, 196 S.W. 940, 129 Ark. 550, 1917 Ark. LEXIS 671 (Ark. 1917).

Opinion

McCulloch, C. J.

The defendant, Central Coal & Coke Company, is a corporation organized and existing under the laws of the State of Missouri, with its principal place of business at Kansas City, Mo., and it was, at the time of the occurrence which forms the subject-matter of the present litigation, and is now engaged in operating coal mines in the State of Arkansas, in one of which the plaintiff, W. E. Graham, was employed as a miner. The plaintiff received very serious personal injuries while he was shoveling coal in one of defendant’s mines, the injury being caused by the falling of a rock which had formed a part of the roof of the room in which plaintiff was at work.

This is an action to recover damages caused by alleged negligence of the defendant in rendering the working place unsafe without giving notice to plaintiff of the change in the condition of his working place. A trial before a jury resulted in a verdict in favor of plaintiff' for the recovery of a large sum of money as compensation for his injuries.

The first question presented is whether or not the motion for a new trial and the bill of exceptions were filed in apt time and acted on by the court so as to bring before us for review the proceedings in the trial court. The action was instituted and tried in the circuit court of Lawrence County, for the Eastern District, which sits, at Walnut Ridge. The trial was begun on October 20, 1916, and was concluded on Saturday, October 21, which was the last day of the term, unless there was an adjournment over to another day after the completion of the term of court in another county as fixed by law to begin on Monday, October 23. At the request of defendant, the court made an order allowing defendant to present its motion for a new trial within ten days from that date, and then an order of adjournment was taken over to Monday, January 29, 1917, which was the day fixed by law for opening a term of court in Jackson county, one of the counties in the same judicial circuit. Defendant filed a motion for new trial with the clerk of the Lawrence Circuit Court on October 24, which has never been acted on by the court, and also presented another motion for new trial to the circuit judge in vacation on November 1, after due notice to plaintiff’s counsel, and the judge made an endorsement .on the motion to the effect that it was overruled and granting an appeal to the Supreme Court, and allowing ninety days within which the bill of exceptions could be filed. That motion, with the endorsement thereon of the circuit judge was filed with the clerk of the Lawrence Circuit Court on November 2, and has been brought up in the transcript, together with the bill of exceptions, which was filed within the ninety days allowed. ,

A statute of this State governing presentation of motions for new trial in civil actions at law contains the following provision:

“Provided, that where the verdict or decision is rendered within three days- of the expiration or adjournment of the term, a motion for a new trial, with an alternative prayer for appeal to the Supreme Court in case said motion be overruled, may be presented, upon reasonable notice to the opposing party or his attorney, of record, to the judge or chancellor, or his successor in office, of the district in which said verdict or decision was rendered, wherever he may be found, at any time within thirty days, from the date of the verdict or decision, and such judge or chancellor shall pass upon said motion and endorse his ruling thereon, upon the back of the motion, either granting the motion or overruling same; and if said motion be overruled he shall also endorse upon said motion, his order granting an appeal to the Supreme Court, and his further order specifying a reasonable time allowed in said cause for filing a bill of exceptions. Upon filing such motion and the judge’s order thereon, with the clerk of the court where the cause is pending it shall become a part of the records and files of the cause, and shall have the same legal effect as if same had been filed in term time, as now provided by law.” Kirby’s Digest, sec. 6218, as amended by act of May 31, 1909, p. 890.

(1-3) The statute, prior to the amendment just referred to, required that a motion for new trial be filed during the term, except on certain grounds not involved in the present inquiry, and the contention of counsel for plaintiff is that the amendment whereby there was an attempt to authorize a circuit judge in vacation to rule on motions for hew trial is void. The argument is that it is an attempt to confer judicial power on the judge instead of on the court, and that for that reason the statute is void. We do not agree with learned counsel in this contention, for there has been no attempt on the part of the law-makers to change the source of judicial power. Of course, the circuit court in ruling on the motion for a new trial and granting an appeal to the Supreme* Court acts judicially, but it is within the power of the Legislature to regulate the manner in which that power may be exercised by the judicial officer who constitutes the court. The action of the judge pursuant to the terms of the statute is, after all, that of the court, notwithstanding the fact that the authorized acts are performed at other than stated times and places. In other words, we think that the Legislature may authorize the circuit judge to act for that court in a judicial capacity under any circumstances under which the adversary parties could have an opportunity for receiving notice, and that that would be the exercise of the judicial power by the circuit court created by the Constitution. There is nothing in the Constitution of the State which requires that every judicial act shall be performed at a regular term of the court. The only positive command of the Constitution in that respect is that circuit courts ‘ ‘ shall hold their terms in each county at such times and places as ar.e or may be prescribed by law” (Art. VII, Sec. 12), which is construed to mean that there must be at least one term of court in a county in each year. Parker v. Sanders, Judge, 46 Ark. 229. This does not restrict the power of the Legislature with respect to authorizing the exercise of judicial power at other times or places. Jones Ex parte, 27 Ark. 349; Walker v. State, 35 Ark. 386.

(4-6) The next contention of counsel is that the statute authorizes motions for new trial to be presented after the end of the term only in the event that “the ver,dict or decision is rendered within three days of the expiration or.adjournment of the term,” and that in this instance there was no final adjournment until the date to which the court adjourned over, towit, January 29, 1917. It is true that this feature of the statute applies only to a final adjournment within three days after the return of the verdict in a given case, and not to an adjournment over to a fixed date. But we are of the opinion that an adjournment over to a day fixed by law for the holding of court in another county in the same circuit is void, and that the term lapses by virtue of the adjournment. The attempt of the court to adjourn over to an impossible date was, in other words, tantamount to a final adjournment. Two courts in the same circuit presided over by one judge can not be held on the same day, and an attempt by the judge of a circuit to do that, or even for the Legislature to attempt to authorize it is futile.

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Bluebook (online)
196 S.W. 940, 129 Ark. 550, 1917 Ark. LEXIS 671, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/central-coal-coke-co-v-graham-ark-1917.