Cleveland Retail Grocers' Ass'n v. Exton

10 Ohio Cir. Dec. 557
CourtCuyahoga Circuit Court
DecidedJanuary 15, 1899
StatusPublished

This text of 10 Ohio Cir. Dec. 557 (Cleveland Retail Grocers' Ass'n v. Exton) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Cuyahoga Circuit Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cleveland Retail Grocers' Ass'n v. Exton, 10 Ohio Cir. Dec. 557 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1899).

Opinion

Caldwell, J.

There are three motions that we have before us. The motion in . the case of the Cleveland Retail Grocers’ Association against Sarah A. Exton is to strike the bill of exceptions from the files. In the case of Wm. E. Godfrey against the same party, there is the same motion; and in the case of the Cleveland Retail Grocers’ Association against Godfrey, there is a motion by the plaintiff in error for an order to the clerk to amend the journal entries.

This case was tried in the court below, and judgment given, and, after that, a motion was filed for a new trial, which motion was pending for some time, and the motion was finally passed on by the court, and a petition in error was filed in this court and journal entries which showed the judgment, but did not show the overruling or any action of the court on the motion for a new trial. The case then stood in this : court on a petition in error, and time passed on until six months had elapsed, when the plaintiff came in and asked for an order to the clerk to amend the journal entries by placing in the journal entries the over[558]*558ruling of the motion for a new trial and, if this goes into the journal, entries, then the journal entries will show that the case is yet within the. statutory limits when the action in error may be commenced and the-journal entries filed; but, if this motion is not allowed, then the bill of exceptions should properly be stricken 08. In this case, it wás not filed in time, as shown by the journal entries we have. That raises the question that has been discussed, and the only one here to pass upon— whether the journal entries in a case can or cannot be amended alter the. time limited by statute for commencing proceedings in error has elapsed.

The Supreme Court has passed upon this matter in two diflerent cases, to which our attention has been called:

First — In Townsend v. Harrison, 58 Ohio St., 398:

“Where all the assignments of error in a petition in error, are founded upon a bill pf exceptions taken in a lower court, but not filed, in a higher court within six months after the rendition of the judgment in the court below, the judgment should be affirmed, but such state of the record is no ground for dismissing the petition in error.”

That simply decides this question, that where the petition in error-says certain matters of error, all of which are founded upon the bill of exceptions, which bill was not filed within the six months with the court, it is proper to strike off the bill of exceptions, but not proper to* dismiss the petition in error, especially it there are other grounds than those that are founded in the bill oi exceptions.

I will not pay much attention to that case, because we have another here where the discussion is more directly in point.

In Second National Bank of Bucyrus v. Moderwell et al., 59 Ohio St., 221, the case was decided by the Supreme Court on proceedings in error. The syllabus in that case is as follows:

1. Section 6716 and section 6723, Revised Statutes, when construed-together, require that a plaintiff in error file in this court, within six months (four months since April 25, 1898, when sec. 6723 Rev. Stat.,. was amended, 93 O. L. 394), from the rendition of the judgment complained of, “either a transcript of the final record, or a transcript of the docket and journal entries, with such original papers or transcripts-thereof as are necessary to exhibit the error complained of.” If a paper writing filed in this court as such transcript, etc., is not sufficient to-exhibit the error complained of, no amendment thereof or addition thereto can be made after the expiration of such period of six months.

22. Where, however, such transcript, etc., is sufficient to exhibit the error complained of, but the certificate of the clerk of the circuit or court of common pleas authenticating such transcript is materially defective, such certificate is amendable by virtue of section 5114, Revised; Statutes, and the amendment may be made after the expiration of such-period of six months.

The sections of the Revised Statutes, referred to here, as laying that-ground for jurisdiction, are sections 6716 and 6723.

Section 6716 reads: “The plaintifl in error shall file with his-petition either a transcript of the final record, or a transcript of the-docket or journal entries, with such original papers or transcripts thereof' as are necessary to exhibit the error complained of; and, if original-papers and pleadings are filed, and the final record has not been made, the reviewing court may permit the temporary withdrawal of the originals for a reasonable time, to allow the recording thereof, or direct [559]*559copies thereof to be made and filed, and the originals to be returned to the inferior tribunal.”

Section 6728, Revised Statutes, is as to the limitation:

No proceedings to reverse, affect or modify a judgment or final, order shall be commenced, unless within six months after the rendition of the judgment or the making of the final order complained ol; or in case the person entitled to such proceedings is an infant, a person of unsound mind or imprisoned, within six months as aforesaid, exclusive of the time of such disability.”

Of course, the time of limitation is now changed, and it is these, two sections that the Supreme Court in the syllabus say, when they are construed together, require of the plaintifl in error — I believe the time now is four months from the rendition of the judgment — either the transcript in full, or a transcript of such original papers.

Bradbury, J., in discussing this matter, says:

‘‘The rights to institute and carry on proceedings in error is strictly statutory. If therefore the plaintiff in error has not complied with the-conditions prescribed by the statute as necessary to entitle it to a review of the judgment of which it complains, it has no right to have that judgment reviewed. One of these requirements, as we have seen, is-that the petition in error and a transcript of the proceedings must be filed within six months from the rendition of the judgment, sought to' be reversed. It follows, therefore, as a'matter of course, that if an authenticated transcript is necessary, and is not filed within the six months, the petition and transcript should be stricken from the files. If such transcript is necessarjq and must be filed within the time prescribed, then as it is now too late to begin proceedings anew the plaintiff in error has lost its right to a review of the judgment of the circuit, court.”

Then Judge Bradbury continues:

“It is at least a debatable question whether an authentication of the transcript by the clerk of the court where the judgment is found is necessary in a proceeding in error. In the case of appeals, section 5285, Revised Statutes, requires the clerk, in direct terms, to ‘make an authenticated transcript,’ etc. But section 6716', which prescribes the kind of transcript to be filed with the petition in error, is silent as to an authentication by the clerk. The statute simply requires ‘a transcript’ to be filed.”

That pertains to the particular facts of this case. Now, it is clear, that one of two things must be done by the petition in error; that is by the plaintiff in error in his petition when he files it. Under sec. 6716, Rev. Stat.

“First, he may file a transcript of the final record.

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Bluebook (online)
10 Ohio Cir. Dec. 557, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cleveland-retail-grocers-assn-v-exton-ohcirctcuyahoga-1899.