Cleveland v. Palin

199 N.E. 142, 209 Ind. 382, 1936 Ind. LEXIS 145
CourtIndiana Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 8, 1936
DocketNo. 26,429.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 199 N.E. 142 (Cleveland v. Palin) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cleveland v. Palin, 199 N.E. 142, 209 Ind. 382, 1936 Ind. LEXIS 145 (Ind. 1936).

Opinion

Treanor, J.

This i’s an appeal from a judgment of the Fountain Circuit Court rendered in an election contest suit. The election out of which the contest arose was held in the Town of Mellott on November 7, 1933. Five separate election contest suits were brought for the offices of town clerk, town treasurer, and the three offices of town trustees. Recount commissioners certified that each of the contestors, appellees here, had received a majority of the votes cast at the election for their respective offices. The suits were consolidated for trial, finding, and judgment. Appellants requested the court, in writing, to make a special finding of facts and to state conclusions of law thereon, which request was granted. An agreed statement of facts was submitted as the evidence in the trial court. On December 20, 1933, being the 72nd judicial day of the December term *384 of the Fountain Circuit Court, the trial court made its special finding of facts and stated its conclusions of law, to which conclusions of law appellants thereupon excepted. Judgment was rendered in favor of appellees, contestors below, that each had been duly elected to the office for which he was a candidate.

On January 15, 1934, being the 13th judicial day of the January term, 1934, appellants requested the trial court to fix the amount of the appeal bond. This the trial court refused to do and appellants excepted to the ruling.

Errors assigned upon appeal are that the court erred (1) in each of its conclusions of law stated upon the special findings of facts and (2) in overruling appellants’ motion to fix and determine the amounts of the appeal bonds.

Appellees filed a motion to dismiss this appeal upon the grounds (a) that exceptions to conclusions of law on special findings of facts, based upon an agreed statement- of facts, do not present any question on appeal, and (b) that no appeal was ever prayed by the appellants or granted by the lower court.

We shall first consider the motion to dismiss. In support of the first ground for dismissal appellees cite the cases of Western Union Tel. Co. v. Frank (1882), 85 Ind. 480; Zeller v. City of Crawfordsville (1883), 90 Ind. 262; City of Terre Haute v. Burns (1918), 69 Ind. App. 7, 116 N. E. 604; Henes v. Henes (1892), 5 Ind. App. 100, 31 N. E. 832; and Reddick v. Board, etc. (1896), 14 Ind. App. 598, 41 N. E. 834, 43 N. E. 238. There is support for appellees’ contention in Western Union, etc. v. Frank, supra. The opinion in that case assumes that a purported special finding of facts which is based upon an agreed statement of facts, can amount only to a general finding; and, consequently, that such a finding cannot be the basis of conclusions of *385 law. The other cases, however, do not support appellees’ position.

In Zellers v. City of Crawfordsville, supra, an agreed statement was used merely as evidence;, but it was pointed out that the proceeding was not had under the statute providing for a request for special finding and conclusions of law. The opinion did not state whether a request for a special finding had been made.

In City of Terre Haute v. Burns, supra, the evidence was undisputed, and the parties filed with the trial court a complete statement of the evidence. A special finding of facts was made at the request of a party. Appellee contended on appeal that no question could be presented by exceptions to the conclusions of law because the parties agreed to the facts. The Appellate Court recognized that no question is presented on appeal by exceptions to conclusions of law based upon an agreed statement of facts, citing Western Union Tel. Co. v. Frank, supra; but appellee’s contention was rejected upon the ground that a submission of the cause upon an agreed statement of the evidence would not prevent the court’s making a special finding of facts at the request of a party.

In Henes v. Henes, supra, the record failed to show that a special finding of facts had been requested or made, and the court correctly held that the agreed statement of facts could not be considered as'a special finding of facts.

In Reddick v. Board, etc., supra, it was held that the use of an agreed statement of facts as evidence does not make of such statement a special finding of facts and does not incorporate such statement into the record without a bill of exceptions or order of court. This is correct, but obviously does not mean that a special finding cannot be made by the trial court, upon request *386 of a party, when the only evidence is in the form of an agreed statement of facts.

It is clear that the instant case was not submitted to the trial court as an agreed case upon an agreed statement of facts, made out and signed by the parties, as provided for in §2-2201, Burns Ind. St. Ann. 1933, Acts 1881 (Sp. Sess.), ch. 38, §456, p. 240. This court has recognized a distinction between the trial of an agreed case and the hearing of evidence upon an agreed statement of facts. 1 Where there is not a compliance with the statutory requirements for the submission of an agreed case (§2-2201, Burns, etc., supra) the effect of submitting the evidence in the form of an agreed statement of facts is the same as a stipulation between the parties as to what constitutes the evidence in the case, and the purpose is to simplify the trial by obviating the necessity of making proof. 2 Since there is no statutory provision which precludes a trial court from basing a special finding of facts upon an agreed statement of facts, we see no reason for holding that the submission of the evidence in the form of an agreed statement of facts prevents the court from making a special finding of facts, upon request of a party, and stating conclusions of law thereon. The purpose of an agreed statement of facts is to facilitate the trial of a cause; the purpose of *387 the statutory provision for a special finding of facts is to facilitate review of the cause in case of an appeal. 3 From the standpoint of a reviewing court it is not material whether the trial court’s special finding of facts is the court’s inference from a mass of evidentiary facts presented in the ordinary course of trial, or an inference from an agreed statement of facts.

It was proper for the trial court to make a special finding of facts, upon request of a party, and to state its conclusions of law thereon. Such conclusions of law, properly excepted to, may be assigned as error upon appeal.

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Bluebook (online)
199 N.E. 142, 209 Ind. 382, 1936 Ind. LEXIS 145, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cleveland-v-palin-ind-1936.