First Nat. Bank of Pocatello v. Poling

248 P. 19, 42 Idaho 636, 1926 Ida. LEXIS 124
CourtIdaho Supreme Court
DecidedJune 24, 1926
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 248 P. 19 (First Nat. Bank of Pocatello v. Poling) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Idaho Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
First Nat. Bank of Pocatello v. Poling, 248 P. 19, 42 Idaho 636, 1926 Ida. LEXIS 124 (Idaho 1926).

Opinion

ADAIB, District Judge.

This action was originally commenced in the probate court of Bannock county. A writ of attachment was levied upon certain personal property. A *639 motion to dissolve tbe attachment was interposed upon various grounds, chief of which was that the affidavit of attachment was false in that plaintiff held a title retaining note signed by one William Cleazie as collateral security, and also held a chattel mortgage which had not been legally foreclosed at the time the affidavit of attachment was executed and the writ issued. An answer was filed by the defendants also alleging that the chattel mortgage executed as security for the note sued upon had never been legally foreclosed and that plaintiff held a title retaining note as collateral security therefor. The action was appealed and tried de novo in the district court, and the judge directed a verdict for plaintiff in the sum of $198.25. No order denying the motion for the discharge of the attachment was ever signed by the trial court and no entry was ever made of any action thereon in the court minutes as prepared by the clerk. From the judgment and the purported order refusing to dissolve the attachment, Hugh Poling and Zetta Poling, two of said defendants, appeal to this court.

C. S., sec. 7152, provides that an appeal may be taken from a district court to the supreme court, in certain matters therein specified, one of which is an order dissolving or refusing to dissolve an attachment, such appeal to be taken within sixty days after the order is made and entered on the minutes of the court, or filed with the clerk.

C. S., sec. 7161, is as follows: “On appeal from a judgment rendered on an appeal, or from an order, except an order granting or refusing a new trial, the appellant must furnish the court with a copy of the notice of appeal, of the judgment or order appealed from, and of papers used on the hearing in the court below.”

This record contains no reference to any action by the court below on the motion to discharge the attachment, except that the reporter’s transcript shows that the judge orally announced after trial on the merits, that this motion was denied. At the time the appeal was perfected the reporter’s transcript had not been prepared, settled and allowed, and there was nothing in the record, including *640 the minutes of the court prepared by the clerk, showing any action whatsoever on this motion.

C. S., sec. 7194, defines an order as “every direction of a court or judge made or entered in writing and not included in a judgment.”

This court has held that an order is made when signed by the judge. (Exchange National Bank v. Northern Idaho Pine Lumber Co., 24 Ida. 671, 135 Pac. 747; Dahlstrom v. Portland Mining Co., 12 Ida. 87, 85 Pac. 916.)

Regardless of statute an order has been defined,as a decision made during the progress of the case, either prior or subsequent to final judgment, settling some point of practice or some question collateral to the main issue presented by the pleadings and necessary to be disposed of before such issue can be passed upon by the court, or necessary to be determined in carrying into execution the final judgment. (29 Cyc. 1514.)

The record in this case does not show any order made and entered in accordance with the provisions of the statutes, nor within what in the practice is regarded as the minutes of the court. The reporter’s notes are the record of certain of the proceedings on the trial of the cause, but do not ordinarily constitute the court minutes proper. At common law, the minutes were merely memoranda from which records were made up after the term, but under modern practice the minutes are kept by the clerk, and usually authenticated by the judge, and may be looked to as evidence of the proceedings of the court. We must look to the entries made by the clerk and consider them as evidence of what occurred in court. To give certainty, authority and verity to the orders of courts of record the minutes showing its proceedings should be prepared and kept by the clerk, for they purport to give the orders, actions, and decrees of the court.

In the case of Spivey v. District Court, 37 Ida. 774, 219 Pac. 203, it is said:

“There is no statute prescribing just how, or by whom the minutes or journal shall be kept. However, the prac *641 tice has been firmly established, and should be recognized, of having the clerk enter in the minutes, or journal a written statement of the action taken by the court. It is to such an entry that the above-mentioned statutes must refer. ’ ’

The notes of the official court reporter do not constitute court minutes proper, and an appeal will not ordinarily lie from a ruling or order orally made and found only in the reporter’s transcript, under C. S., sec. 7152. While C. S., sec. 6560, as amended by chapter 111, Sess. Laws of 1925, provides that the stenographic record made by the court reporter shall, when properly certified, “constitute prima facie the minutes of the court, and may be used on all motions for new trials, review or appeal, when the minutes of the court may be used,” this provision is intended to refer to the court’s rulings on questions of procedure, the admissibility of evidence, motions to elect, motions for 'nonsuit or directed verdicts, and kindred subjects directly involved in the trial of the cause, and not to final rulings and orders orally announced on collateral issues not directly affecting the trial itself. This section was not intended by the legislature to obviate the necessity of keeping a record by the clerk, and it does not refer to nor affect the appealable orders and interlocutory judgments specified in paragraph 2 of C. S., sec. 7152, under which only this appeal could be taken.

There must be a positive and clear record of the action of the court on all motions and proceedings, which can be definitely ascertained from an examination of such record. Had this appeal not been taken, the reporter’s notes would not have been transcribed, and there would have been nothing of record from which any person, other than the reporter himself, could determine what action, if any, the court had taken in reference to said motion. Even now, after the appeal has been perfected, the reporter’s transcript not being filed in the office of the clerk of the district court, there is no record in that office of any action or decision on the motion to dissolve the attachment. *642 A mere oral decision is of no avail for the purpose of appeal or error without an order of court making it of record. (3 C. J. 602, sec. 443; Stewart Mining Co. v. Ontario Mining Co., 23 Ida. 724, 132 Pac. 787.) In order that a judgment, order or decree may be reviewed by an appellate court, it must not only be rendered or made but it must also, in most jurisdictions, be entered in permanent form as a record of the court. (3 C. J. 612, see. 462.)

The appeal in this case, based on the refusal to dissolve the attachment, will be dismissed because no order to that effect has in fact ever been entered.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
248 P. 19, 42 Idaho 636, 1926 Ida. LEXIS 124, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/first-nat-bank-of-pocatello-v-poling-idaho-1926.